Listed below is background material on the Norwegian Sea Large Marine Ecosystem. To keep this site current, users are requested to provide updated information or links to the LME webmaster .
The Norwegian Shelf Large Marine Ecosystem is characterized by its Subarctic climate. It is a western boundary ecosystem situated off the West Coast of Norway. The Iceland-Faroe Ridge separates the relatively warm waters of the Northeast North Atlantic from the cold Arctic deep water of the Norwegian Sea. A boundary current flows along the edge of the Norwegian Shelf into the Arctic region. The cold and low salinity East Icelandic Current flows southeast towards the Norwegian Basin. Climate is the primary force driving the LME, with intensive fishing as the secondary driving force. LME book chapters and articles pertaining to this LME include Ellertsen, et al, 1990; and Blindheim and Skjoldal, 1993.
I. Productivity:
The Norwegian Shelf LME is considered a Class I, highly productive (>300 gC/m2-yr) ecosystem based on SeaWiFS global primary productivity estimates. Its high productivity is probably linked to the nutrient rich, cold Arctic waters that characterize this LME (see Furnes and Sundby, 1980). A temperature and salinity anomaly occurring in the northern North Atlantic during the 1960s and 1970s (see speculations as to the reason for the anomaly in Dickson et al., 1988), has probably had a triggering effect on ecological events. It has had a major impact on Norwegian spring-spawning herring, the first large stock to be affected, as discussed by Dragesund et al., 1980, and the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES). There was a change in feeding conditions for the herring stock, which had to shift further to the northeast. For more information on the effect of environmental factors on cod recruitment variability, see Ellertsen et al, 1990. For a map of the feeding and spawning area of the blue whiting in relation to the Norwegian Sea, see Blindheim and Skjoldal, 1993, p. 191. A key species in this LME is the copepod Calanus finmarchicus, which is transported from the Norwegian Sea into the Barents Sea. For the life cycle and transport of Calanus finmarchicus from the Norwegian Sea into the Barents Sea, see Blindheim and Skjoldal, 1993, p. 192. For a map of the distribution and abundance of the copepod nauplii in 1982 and in 1984, see Ellertsen et al, 1990, p. 28. There is a need for better understanding of the climate system and its impacts on the LME.
II. Fish and Fisheries:
The Norwegian Shelf LME has a complex fishery history with concomitant influences of ecological anomalies, high fishery mortality and early implementation of management measures. The FAO 10-year trend shows an increase in the total catch, from 500,000 tons in 1990, to 1.8 million tons in 1999 (see FAO, 2003). The average yearly catch is 1.5 million tons. The average catch composition is dominated by 3 groups: herrings, sardines and anchovies (almost half the catch); pelagic fishes (14% of the catch); and cods, hakes and haddocks (32% of the catch). In the 1960s and 1970s, fishing pressure increased as a result of purse seining technology. Herrings became depleted, which eventually led to a collapse. After two decades of very low abundance, herring stock has recently recovered to a total biomass of over 10 millions tons. The stock winters in the Vestfjord, and feeds all over the Norwegian Sea in the summer. Main spawning grounds are off Møre, with smaller populations spawning off of Iceland and southern Norway.
For a map of the distribution of the Arcto-Norwegian cod,
see Ellertsen et al, 1990, p. 20. The spawning areas of cod are located in the
Norwegian coastal current, in coastal bays and near offshore banks (see
Ellertsen et al., 1989). Temperature is an important factor affecting cod
recruitment. The data strongly suggests that a high temperature is a necessary
condition for the formation of a strong year-class. Capelin migrates out of the
Barents Sea into the Norwegian Sea. For more information on the influence of
the marine environment on fish recruitment and biomass yields, see Ellertsen et
al., 1990. For detailed fish catch statistics for this LME, see data collected
by the University of British
Columbia Fisheries Center.
The overriding goal of Norwegian fisheries management is the sustainable
use of living marine resources.
III. Pollution and
Ecosystem Health:
Some pollution issues in this LME stem from Norway’s
offshore oil industry, and the risk of oil spills in Norwegian waters. Poor
weather and substandard ships have caused groundings and losses. For more
information about pollution control in Norway, see the Norwegian Pollution
Control Authority (SFT), under Norway’s Ministry of the Environment. This
agency aims to promote sustainable development.
The fisheries industry is the backbone of coastal Norway’s economy. The herring fishery, for instance, is of vital socio-economic importance. Norway exports fish and fish products to more than 150 countries world-wide. The fishing industry in Norway is divided into a marine and an aquaculture sector. The former employs some 15,000 fishermen at sea, and 12,000 people working in 500 fish plants along the coast. The aquaculture industry employs some 6,000 people, with fish farms all along the North Norwegian coast.
V. Governance:
Norway established an EEZ in 1977. It has negotiated a
series of agreements with neighboring countries, including Russia, to decide on
management measures and divisions of quotas on shared fish stocks. Several
national measures for the management of the Norwegian Shelf LME have been
implemented in Norway. ICES, the International Council for
Exploration of the Seas, an organization that formulates scientific advice
to fisheries authorities in the North Atlantic region, chose Norway for its
symposium on the changing states of LMEs in the North Atlantic in 1999.
Articles and LME volumes:
Blindheim, Johan and Skjoldal, Hein Rune, 1993. "Effects of Climatic Changes on the Biomass Yield of the Barents Sea, Norwegian Sea, and West Greenland Large Marine Ecosystems," in Sherman, K; Alexander, L. M. and Gold, B. (eds.), Large Marine Ecosystems: Stress, Mitigation, and Sustainability (Washington, D. C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science) pp.185-198.
Ellertsen, B., P. Fossum, P. Solemdal, S. Sundby and S. Tilseth, 1990. "Environmental Influence on Recruitment and Biomass Yields in the Norwegian Sea Ecosystem", in. Sherman, K; Alexander, L. M. and Gold, B. (eds.), Large Marine Ecosystems: Patterns, Processes, and Yields (Washington, D. C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science) pp.19-35.
FAO,
2003. Trends in oceanic captures and clustering of large marine ecosystems—2
studies based on the FAO capture database. FAO fisheries
technical paper 435. 71 pages.
Other references:
Anonymous, 1979. The biology, distribution and state of exploitation of fish stocks in the ICES area, Part II. Int. Counc. Explor. Sea Coop. Res. Rep. 86.
Dickson, R.R., Meincke, J., Malmberg, S.Aa., and Lee, A.J. 1988. The “great salinity anomaly” in the northern North Atlantic 1968-1982. Prog. Oceanogr. 20:103-151.
Ellertsen, B., Fossum, P., Solemdal, P., and Sundby, S. 1989. Relation between temperature and survival of eggs and first-feeding larvae of northeast Arctic cod (Gadus Morhua L). Rapp. R.-v.Reun. Cons. Int. Explor. Mer 191:209-219.
Furnes, G. K. and Sundby, S. 1980. "Upwelling and Wind Induced Circulation in Vestfjorden", in Proceedings from Norwegian Coastal Current Symposium. Saetre, R. and Mork, M. eds. Univ. of Bergen, Geilo, Norway, 9-12 September 1980.
Hamre, J. 1988. Some aspects of the interrelation between the herring in the Norwegian Sea and the stocks of capelin and cod in the Barents Sea. ICES CM 1988/H:42. 15 p.
Hamre, J. 1994. Biodiversity and exploitation of the main fish stocks in the Norwegian-Barents Sea ecosystem. Biodiversity and conservation 3:473-492.
Hamre, J. and E. Hatlebakk. 1998. System Model (Systmod) for the Norwegian Sea and the Barents Sea. In: T. Rødseth (ed.). Models for multispecies management. Physica-Verlag. 93-115.
Misund, O.A., H. Vilhjálmsson, S.H. Jákupsstovu, I. Röttingen, S. Belikov, O.S. Astthorsson, J. Blindheim, J. Jónsson, A. Krysov, S.A. Malmberg, and S. Sveinbjörnsson. 1998. Distribution, migration and abundance of Norwegian spring spawning herring in relation to temperature and zooplankton biomass in the Norwegian Sea as recorded by coordinated surveys on spring and summer 1996. Sarsia, 83: 117-127.
Niehoff, B., U. Klenke, H.-J. Hirche, X. Irigoien, R. Head, and R. Harris. 1999. A high frequency time series at Wethership M, Norwegian Sea, during the 1997 spring bloom: the reproductive biology of Calanus finmarchicus. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser., 176: 81-92.
Shevelev, M.S., V.V. Tereschchenko, and N.A. Yaragina. 1987. Distribution and behaviour of demersal fishes in the Barents and Norwegian Seas, and the factors influencing them. In: H. Loeng (ed.). The effect of oceanographic conditions on distribution and population dynamics of commercial fish stocks in the Barents Sea. Proceedings of the third Soviet-Norwegian Symposium, Murmansk, 26-28 May 1986. Institute of Marine Research, Bergen, Norway. 181-190.
Sundby, S. and Bratland, P. 1987. "Spatial Distribution and Production of Eggs from Northeast-Arctic Cod at the Coast of Northern Norway 1983-1985". Fisken Hav. 1: 1-58.
Tjelmeland, S. and B. Bogstad. 1998. System Model (Systmod) for the Norwegian Sea and the Barents Sea. In: T. Rødseth (ed.). Models for multispecies management. Physica-Verlag. 69-91.
modified 29 April 2004