BearHealth Norway

Anthropogenic pollution and climate change are the two most significant threats for Arctic biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Because of food chain biomagnification of lipophilic persistent organic pollutants (POPs), the polar bear is one of the species which have the highest levels of these ha...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Skaare, Janneche Utne, Aars, Jon, Lie, Elisabeth, Jenssen, Bjørn Munro, Bytingsvik, Jenny
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Norwegian Polar Institute 2009
Subjects:
IPY
Online Access:http://data.npolar.no/dataset/f13aea75-8705-5495-8eef-21f9605f9e12
id npolardata:oai:npolar.no:dataset/f13aea75-8705-5495-8eef-21f9605f9e12
record_format openpolar
spelling npolardata:oai:npolar.no:dataset/f13aea75-8705-5495-8eef-21f9605f9e12 2024-03-03T22:15:37+00:00 BearHealth Norway Skaare, Janneche Utne Aars, Jon Lie, Elisabeth Jenssen, Bjørn Munro Bytingsvik, Jenny BEGINDATE: 2007-04-01 ENDDATE: 2011-12-31 ENVELOPE(16.5672089,16.5672089,78.17762,78.17762) OCEAN, ATLANTIC OCEAN, NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN, SVALBARD AND JAN MAYEN, Spitsbergen GEOGRAPHIC REGION, POLAR GEOGRAPHIC REGION, ARCTIC 2009-09-21 http://data.npolar.no/dataset/f13aea75-8705-5495-8eef-21f9605f9e12 unknown Norwegian Polar Institute ENVIRONMENT BEARHEALTH IPY biology EARTH SCIENCE BIOSPHERE ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS Dataset 2009 npolardata 2017-05-02T18:47:24Z Anthropogenic pollution and climate change are the two most significant threats for Arctic biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Because of food chain biomagnification of lipophilic persistent organic pollutants (POPs), the polar bear is one of the species which have the highest levels of these harmful chemicals. Since POPs may have effects on hormone regulation and physiological homeostasis, reproduction and survival, POPs may adversely affect the plasticity of responses that polar bears have to environmental changes. Thus, in combination these two major anthropogenic factors may have a significant effect on Arctic ecosystem functions. The International Polar Year (IPY) project “BearHealth” aims at studying adverse health effects of POPs in polar bears, and the interacting effects of POPs and climate change on polar bears. In the circumpolar international project, several biomarker endpoints, such as immune, hormonal, vitamin, bone, and histological variables will be examined in relation to exposure to POPs and other emerging novel environmental pollutants. Analyses of chemicals and biomarkers will be conducted on archived material from biobanks, and on samples which will be sampled during the project period. In the Norwegian part of the project we will focus on health effects of POPs related to thyroid and reproductive hormone homeostasis and on vitamin A, E and D status, and on interactions between biomarkers, environmental pollutants and climate change variables, and on including new samples from polar bears from Svalbard and Barents Sea region. Efforts will also be made to obtain samples from the Russian Arctic. In cooperation with Danish researchers (which are the coordinators of the international BearHealth project), a study on POP related effects on bone density and structure will be performed on a large collection of polar bears skulls from the Norwegian Arctic and Greenland, and Russia if possible. The results from the Norwegian study will be integrated with the studies conducted by the other participating countries, and the project will end up in an integrated health risk assessment of the interactive effects of POPs and climate change in polar bears. Dataset Arctic biodiversity Arctic Barents Sea Climate change Greenland International Polar Year IPY Jan Mayen North Atlantic Svalbard Spitsbergen Norwegian Polar Data Centre Arctic Barents Sea Greenland Jan Mayen Norway Svalbard Svalbard ENVELOPE(20.000,20.000,78.000,78.000) ENVELOPE(16.5672089,16.5672089,78.17762,78.17762)
institution Open Polar
collection Norwegian Polar Data Centre
op_collection_id npolardata
language unknown
topic ENVIRONMENT
BEARHEALTH
IPY
biology
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOSPHERE
ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS
spellingShingle ENVIRONMENT
BEARHEALTH
IPY
biology
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOSPHERE
ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS
Skaare, Janneche Utne
Aars, Jon
Lie, Elisabeth
Jenssen, Bjørn Munro
Bytingsvik, Jenny
BearHealth Norway
topic_facet ENVIRONMENT
BEARHEALTH
IPY
biology
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOSPHERE
ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS
description Anthropogenic pollution and climate change are the two most significant threats for Arctic biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Because of food chain biomagnification of lipophilic persistent organic pollutants (POPs), the polar bear is one of the species which have the highest levels of these harmful chemicals. Since POPs may have effects on hormone regulation and physiological homeostasis, reproduction and survival, POPs may adversely affect the plasticity of responses that polar bears have to environmental changes. Thus, in combination these two major anthropogenic factors may have a significant effect on Arctic ecosystem functions. The International Polar Year (IPY) project “BearHealth” aims at studying adverse health effects of POPs in polar bears, and the interacting effects of POPs and climate change on polar bears. In the circumpolar international project, several biomarker endpoints, such as immune, hormonal, vitamin, bone, and histological variables will be examined in relation to exposure to POPs and other emerging novel environmental pollutants. Analyses of chemicals and biomarkers will be conducted on archived material from biobanks, and on samples which will be sampled during the project period. In the Norwegian part of the project we will focus on health effects of POPs related to thyroid and reproductive hormone homeostasis and on vitamin A, E and D status, and on interactions between biomarkers, environmental pollutants and climate change variables, and on including new samples from polar bears from Svalbard and Barents Sea region. Efforts will also be made to obtain samples from the Russian Arctic. In cooperation with Danish researchers (which are the coordinators of the international BearHealth project), a study on POP related effects on bone density and structure will be performed on a large collection of polar bears skulls from the Norwegian Arctic and Greenland, and Russia if possible. The results from the Norwegian study will be integrated with the studies conducted by the other participating countries, and the project will end up in an integrated health risk assessment of the interactive effects of POPs and climate change in polar bears.
format Dataset
author Skaare, Janneche Utne
Aars, Jon
Lie, Elisabeth
Jenssen, Bjørn Munro
Bytingsvik, Jenny
author_facet Skaare, Janneche Utne
Aars, Jon
Lie, Elisabeth
Jenssen, Bjørn Munro
Bytingsvik, Jenny
author_sort Skaare, Janneche Utne
title BearHealth Norway
title_short BearHealth Norway
title_full BearHealth Norway
title_fullStr BearHealth Norway
title_full_unstemmed BearHealth Norway
title_sort bearhealth norway
publisher Norwegian Polar Institute
publishDate 2009
url http://data.npolar.no/dataset/f13aea75-8705-5495-8eef-21f9605f9e12
op_coverage BEGINDATE: 2007-04-01 ENDDATE: 2011-12-31
ENVELOPE(16.5672089,16.5672089,78.17762,78.17762)
OCEAN, ATLANTIC OCEAN, NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN, SVALBARD AND JAN MAYEN, Spitsbergen
GEOGRAPHIC REGION, POLAR
GEOGRAPHIC REGION, ARCTIC
long_lat ENVELOPE(20.000,20.000,78.000,78.000)
ENVELOPE(16.5672089,16.5672089,78.17762,78.17762)
geographic Arctic
Barents Sea
Greenland
Jan Mayen
Norway
Svalbard
Svalbard
geographic_facet Arctic
Barents Sea
Greenland
Jan Mayen
Norway
Svalbard
Svalbard
genre Arctic biodiversity
Arctic
Barents Sea
Climate change
Greenland
International Polar Year
IPY
Jan Mayen
North Atlantic
Svalbard
Spitsbergen
genre_facet Arctic biodiversity
Arctic
Barents Sea
Climate change
Greenland
International Polar Year
IPY
Jan Mayen
North Atlantic
Svalbard
Spitsbergen
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