Species richness and distribution of chondrichthyan fishes in the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas

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Standard

Species richness and distribution of chondrichthyan fishes in the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas. / Lynghammar, A.; Christiansen, J. S.; Mecklenburg, C. W.; Karamushko, O. V.; Møller, Peter Rask; Gallucci, V. F.

I: Biodiversity, Bind 14, Nr. 1, 2013, s. 57-66.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lynghammar, A, Christiansen, JS, Mecklenburg, CW, Karamushko, OV, Møller, PR & Gallucci, VF 2013, 'Species richness and distribution of chondrichthyan fishes in the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas', Biodiversity, bind 14, nr. 1, s. 57-66. https://doi.org/10.1080/14888386.2012.706198

APA

Lynghammar, A., Christiansen, J. S., Mecklenburg, C. W., Karamushko, O. V., Møller, P. R., & Gallucci, V. F. (2013). Species richness and distribution of chondrichthyan fishes in the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas. Biodiversity, 14(1), 57-66. https://doi.org/10.1080/14888386.2012.706198

Vancouver

Lynghammar A, Christiansen JS, Mecklenburg CW, Karamushko OV, Møller PR, Gallucci VF. Species richness and distribution of chondrichthyan fishes in the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas. Biodiversity. 2013;14(1):57-66. https://doi.org/10.1080/14888386.2012.706198

Author

Lynghammar, A. ; Christiansen, J. S. ; Mecklenburg, C. W. ; Karamushko, O. V. ; Møller, Peter Rask ; Gallucci, V. F. / Species richness and distribution of chondrichthyan fishes in the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas. I: Biodiversity. 2013 ; Bind 14, Nr. 1. s. 57-66.

Bibtex

@article{49d8cbc9185d4f029d9db7b7fe22848c,
title = "Species richness and distribution of chondrichthyan fishes in the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas",
abstract = "The sea ice cover decreases and human activity increases in Arctic waters. Fisheries and bycatch issues, shipping and petroleum exploitation (pollution issues) make it imperative to establish biological baselines for the marine fishes inhabiting the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas (AOAS). Species richness, zoogeographic affiliations and Red List statuses among chondrichthyan fishes (Chondrichthyes) were examined across 16 AOAS regions as a first step towards credible conservation actions. Published literature and museum vouchers were consulted for presence/absence data. Although many regions are poorly sampled, 49 chondrichthyan species have been reported from the AOAS. Skates and rays are the most species-rich taxon, represented by 27 species in family Rajidae and one species in family Dasyatidae. The sharks comprise 20 species in 13 families and the chimaeras one species in family Chimaeridae. The Norwegian Sea (28), Barents Sea (19) and Bering Sea (18) are particularly species-rich, and despite similar species numbers the two latter seas have no species in common. The remaining AOAS regions are inhabited by six species or less. Large-scale commercial fisheries for chondrichthyans are yet to be developed in the AOAS, but the precautionary principle should be implemented as abundances, basic taxonomy and biology are still largely unknown.",
keywords = "Arctic seas, cartilaginous fish, Chondrichthyes, shark, skate, species richness, zoogeography",
author = "A. Lynghammar and Christiansen, {J. S.} and Mecklenburg, {C. W.} and Karamushko, {O. V.} and M{\o}ller, {Peter Rask} and Gallucci, {V. F.}",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1080/14888386.2012.706198",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "57--66",
journal = "Biodiversity",
issn = "1488-8386",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Species richness and distribution of chondrichthyan fishes in the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas

AU - Lynghammar, A.

AU - Christiansen, J. S.

AU - Mecklenburg, C. W.

AU - Karamushko, O. V.

AU - Møller, Peter Rask

AU - Gallucci, V. F.

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - The sea ice cover decreases and human activity increases in Arctic waters. Fisheries and bycatch issues, shipping and petroleum exploitation (pollution issues) make it imperative to establish biological baselines for the marine fishes inhabiting the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas (AOAS). Species richness, zoogeographic affiliations and Red List statuses among chondrichthyan fishes (Chondrichthyes) were examined across 16 AOAS regions as a first step towards credible conservation actions. Published literature and museum vouchers were consulted for presence/absence data. Although many regions are poorly sampled, 49 chondrichthyan species have been reported from the AOAS. Skates and rays are the most species-rich taxon, represented by 27 species in family Rajidae and one species in family Dasyatidae. The sharks comprise 20 species in 13 families and the chimaeras one species in family Chimaeridae. The Norwegian Sea (28), Barents Sea (19) and Bering Sea (18) are particularly species-rich, and despite similar species numbers the two latter seas have no species in common. The remaining AOAS regions are inhabited by six species or less. Large-scale commercial fisheries for chondrichthyans are yet to be developed in the AOAS, but the precautionary principle should be implemented as abundances, basic taxonomy and biology are still largely unknown.

AB - The sea ice cover decreases and human activity increases in Arctic waters. Fisheries and bycatch issues, shipping and petroleum exploitation (pollution issues) make it imperative to establish biological baselines for the marine fishes inhabiting the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas (AOAS). Species richness, zoogeographic affiliations and Red List statuses among chondrichthyan fishes (Chondrichthyes) were examined across 16 AOAS regions as a first step towards credible conservation actions. Published literature and museum vouchers were consulted for presence/absence data. Although many regions are poorly sampled, 49 chondrichthyan species have been reported from the AOAS. Skates and rays are the most species-rich taxon, represented by 27 species in family Rajidae and one species in family Dasyatidae. The sharks comprise 20 species in 13 families and the chimaeras one species in family Chimaeridae. The Norwegian Sea (28), Barents Sea (19) and Bering Sea (18) are particularly species-rich, and despite similar species numbers the two latter seas have no species in common. The remaining AOAS regions are inhabited by six species or less. Large-scale commercial fisheries for chondrichthyans are yet to be developed in the AOAS, but the precautionary principle should be implemented as abundances, basic taxonomy and biology are still largely unknown.

KW - Arctic seas

KW - cartilaginous fish

KW - Chondrichthyes

KW - shark

KW - skate

KW - species richness

KW - zoogeography

U2 - 10.1080/14888386.2012.706198

DO - 10.1080/14888386.2012.706198

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84873912113

VL - 14

SP - 57

EP - 66

JO - Biodiversity

JF - Biodiversity

SN - 1488-8386

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 122601937