Webinar on Examining the Relationships between Northern Fur Seals, Pollock, and Climate Change in Alaska

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Webinar on Examining the Relationships between Northern Fur Seals, Pollock, and Climate Change in Alaska

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On Wednesday, July 25, 2018, Dr. Jeremy Sterling and colleagues provided an overview of their project to develop a new spatially explicit bioenergetics model to estimate the dietary needs of northern fur seals, and link the model to the existing climate-to-fish model of the Bering Sea (FEAST) and the multi-species stock assessment model (CEATTLE).

During the webinar, the research team provided an overview for the impetus of the project, the methodology, and how they will proceed over the next 2 to 3 years. The research team will further elucidate how northern fur seals interact with prey, fisheries, and climate change by implementing a four-phase research approach that aims to estimate the:

  • Energy requirements of northern fur seals in the Bering Sea;
  • Prey species and size allocation needed to match the estimated energy requirements of northern fur seals;
  • Climate-specific northern fur seal based multi-species harvest rates for eastern Bering Sea pollock;
  • Expected future availability of pollock (under changing conditions) and its potential impact on northern fur seals.