4 results match your criteria: "College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences University of Alaska Fairbanks Fairbanks Alaska USA.[Affiliation]"

Species distribution models (SDMs) are used to map and predict the geographic distributions of animals based on environmental covariates. Typically, SDMs require high-resolution habitat data and time series information on animal locations. For data-limited regions, defined as having scarce habitat or animal survey data, modeling is more challenging, often failing to incorporate important environmental attributes.

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Invasive species are a major threat to global biodiversity, yet also represent large-scale unplanned ecological and evolutionary experiments to address fundamental questions in nature. Here we analyzed both native and invasive populations of predatory northern pike () to characterize landscape genetic variation, determine the most likely origins of introduced populations, and investigate a presumably postglacial population from Southeast Alaska of unclear provenance. Using a set of 4329 SNPs from 351 individual Alaskan northern pike representing the most widespread geographic sampling to date, our results confirm low levels of genetic diversity in native populations (average 𝝅 of 3.

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Fish are critical ecologically and socioeconomically for subsistence economies in the Arctic, an ecosystem undergoing unprecedented environmental change. Our understanding of the responses of nearshore Arctic fishes to environmental change is inadequate because of limited research on the physicochemical drivers of abundance occurring at a fine scale. Here, high-frequency in situ measurements of pH, temperature, salinity, and dissolved oxygen were paired with daily fish catches in nearshore Alaskan waters of the Beaufort Sea.

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This paper documents a mass mortality event of adult summer chum salmon () returning to the Koyukuk River, Alaska in the Yukon River basin. In response to reports from local communities, a small team of researchers (including the author) surveyed ca. 275 km of river on July 26 and 27, 2019 and counted 1,364 dead salmon.

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