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Vår 2026

BIO-3506 Top predators in polar marine ecosystems: Biology, Role and Management implications - 10 stp


The course is administrated by

Institutt for arktisk og marin biologi

Type of course

The course is aimed at students enrolled in the master’s program in biology and exchange students with similar background.

Mandatory prerequisites: minimum 10 ECTS in ecology (BIO-2017 or equivalent) and statistics (BIO-2004 or equivalent).

The course will only run if a minimum of 5 students are registered by the start date.

The course is offered every other year.


Course contents

Through lectures, seminars, and computer labs, the objective of the course is to provide an overview of and insight into the biology, ecology, and management of marine top predators in polar ecosystems with strong emphasis on marine mammals. There will be particular emphasis on the ecological importance of these marine top predators in relation to ecosystem-based approach to species management in polar environments.

The lectures and seminars will provide theoretical background on the physiology, feeding behavior, social structure, demography, and reproduction of selected species with examples from Arctic and Antarctic ecosystems. The course will also review the anthropogenic threats (e.g., climate change, pollution, fisheries, etc.) that marine top predators are facing and how science-based knowledge can be used by policy makers for a sustainable management of polar ecosystems. During computer/data labs, students will learn how to extract, analyse, and interpret tracking data.

Topics include:


Objective of the course

Knowledge

Students

Skills

Students

General competence

Students


Language of instruction

Language of instruction is English.

The written exam will be in English and answers can be written in English or a Scandinavian language. The oral presentations must be in English.


Teaching methods

Lectures, seminars, participation to the annual NAMMCO marine mammal student symposium, oral presentations, computer lab/data analyses and lab work (dissection of bycatch species).