Authors
Randall R Reeves, Peter J Ewins, Selina Agbayani, Mads Peter Heide-Jørgensen, Kit M Kovacs, Christian Lydersen, Robert Suydam, Wendy Elliott, Gert Polet, Yvette van Dijk, Rosanne Blijleven
Publication date
2014/2/1
Journal
Marine Policy
Volume
44
Pages
375-389
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
The Arctic is one of the fastest-changing parts of the planet. Global climate change is already having major impacts on Arctic ecosystems. Increasing temperatures and reductions in sea ice are particular conservation concerns for ice-associated species, including three endemic cetaceans that have evolved in or joined the Arctic sympagic community over the last 5 M years. Sea ice losses are also a major stimulant to increased industrial interest in the Arctic in previously ice-covered areas. The impacts of climate change are expected to continue and will likely intensify in coming decades. This paper summarizes information on the distribution and movement patterns of the three ice-associated cetacean species that reside year-round in the Arctic, the narwhal (Monodon monoceros), beluga (white whale, Delphinapterus leucas), and bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus). It maps their current distribution and identifies …
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