Ecosystem assessment of the Central Arctic Ocean: Description of human activities, its pressures, and vulnerability of the ecosystem
Rapport, 2025

The Central Arctic Ocean (CAO) is a fast-changing region due to global warming. In addition, it is affected by pressures that are the result of both local human activities, such as research and ship traffic from tourism and the military, and distant global sources that arrive via air, rivers, and ocean currents.

Contaminants, non-indigenous species, marine litter (including microplastics), artificial noise pollution, nutrient and organic enrichment, extraction of species, extraction of non-living resources, physical seabed and sea ice disturbance, artificial light pollution, unintended injury and mortality in open water, and human presence on ice are the 11 local, direct human-induced pressures recognized as relevant for the CAO. Pressures from global sources include contaminants, litter, and non‑indigenous species that enter the ocean from outside the CAO. Both categories of pressure are included in this report. The impact of climate change originating from human activity (the pressure heating) is included as climate-related effects on the ecosystem.

Ice prokaryotes and viruses, water column and seabed prokaryotes and viruses, ice algae, phytoplankton, ice invertebrates, zooplankton, pelagic squid, soft-bottom and hard-bottom benthos, sympagic-, mesopelagic-, and demersal/bentho-pelagic fishes, polar bear, ringed seal, bowhead whale, narwhal, beluga whale, transient-, seasonal resident- and ice obligate-sea birds were identified as groups or species that represent relevant ecosystem components of the CAO. Most of these taxonomic groups have populations that are widely distributed across the entire CAO, while a few groups have limited distributions on the seabed (hard-bottom benthos), in the water column (whales), or along the ice edge (ice-obligate seabirds and ringed seal). While most ecosystem components are present inside the CAO year-round, some few components (whales and migratory and seasonally resident seabirds) are only present for a few months each year.

Some of the relevant pressures introduced by local sources in the CAO are anticipated to have impacts on all (e.g. contaminants), some (e.g. artificial noise pollution), or only a few (e.g. nutrient and organic enrichment) ecosystem components in the CAO.

This report is part II to CRR Vol. 355 - Ecosystem assessment of the Central Arctic Ocean: Description of the ecosystem.

Författare

Lis Lindal Jørgensen

Havforskningsinstituttet

Mario Acquarone

Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme AMAP

Matthew T. Bell Jr.

Ted Stevens Center for Arctic Security Studies

Paul Arthur Berkman

Harvard University

Bodil A. Bluhm

Universitetet i Tromsø – Norges arktiske universitet

Lilian Boehringer

Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft Deutscher Forschungszentren

Tom Christensen

Aarhus Universitet

Jennifer Dannheim

Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft Deutscher Forschungszentren

Jackie Dawson

University of Ottawa

Greg Fiske

Woodwell Climate Research Center

Hauke Flores

Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft Deutscher Forschungszentren

David Fluharty

University of Washington

Anne Kirstine Frie

Havforskningsinstituttet

Maria Gavrilo

Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute

Harald Gjøsæter

Havforskningsinstituttet

Jacqueline M. Grebmeier

University of Maryland

Bjørn Einar Grøsvik

Havforskningsinstituttet

Christiane Hasemann

Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI)

Ida-Maja Hassellöv

Chalmers, Mekanik och maritima vetenskaper, Maritima studier

Kevin Hedges

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

Hilde Elise Heldal

Havforskningsinstituttet

Petter Helgevold Kvadsheim

Forsvarets forskningsinstitutt Norge (FFI)

Martine van den Heuvel-Greve

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

Haakon Hop

Norsk Polarinstitutt

Alf Håkon Hoel

Universitetet i Tromsø – Norges arktiske universitet

Hjalti Hreinsson

Protection of the Arctic Marine Environment (PAME)

Randi B. Ingvaldsen

Havforskningsinstituttet

Edda Johannesen

Havforskningsinstituttet

Kathy Kuletz

U.S. Department of the Interior

Anders Mosbech

Aarhus Universitet

Barbara Niehoff

Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI)

Jessica Nilsson

Havs- och vattenmyndigheten

Jannik Schnier

Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI)

Pauline Snoeijs-Leijonmalm

Stockholms universitet

Jan Jakub Solski

Universitetet i Tromsø – Norges arktiske universitet

T Soltwedel

Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft Deutscher Forschungszentren

Lisa Speer

Natural Resources Defense Council

Cecilie H. von Quillfeldt

Norsk Polarinstitutt

Amanda Ziegler

Nordområdesenter for Klima- og Miljøforskning

Drivkrafter

Hållbar utveckling

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Miljövetenskap

Ekologi

Zoologi

DOI

10.17895/ices.pub.30540437

ISBN

978-87-7482-993-5

Utgivare

ICES

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2026-06-01