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Kevin D. Friedland

Researcher at National Marine Fisheries Service

Publications -  96
Citations -  4244

Kevin D. Friedland is an academic researcher from National Marine Fisheries Service. The author has contributed to research in topics: Marine ecosystem & Salmo. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 89 publications receiving 3644 citations. Previous affiliations of Kevin D. Friedland include National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

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Oceanic changes in the Sargasso Sea and declines in recruitment of the European eel

TL;DR: Friedland et al. as mentioned in this paper found a significant negative correlation between the North Atlantic Oscillation and longterm variations in catches of glass eel stages of the European eel Anguilla anguilla recorded by the fishery independent Den Oever recruitment index (DOI) in the Netherlands, lagged by one year.
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Pathways between Primary Production and Fisheries Yields of Large Marine Ecosystems

TL;DR: It is found primary production is a poor predictor of global fishery yields for a sample of 52 large marine ecosystems, but chlorophyll concentration, particle-export ratio, and the ratio of secondary to primary production were positively associated with yields.
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Reconciling fisheries catch and ocean productivity.

TL;DR: Testing the hypothesis that ecosystem-level variations in pelagic and benthic energy flows from phytoplankton to fish, trophic transfer efficiencies, and fishing effort can quantitatively reconcile this contrast in an energetically consistent manner shows that it can be reconciled.
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The recruitment of Atlantic salmon in Europe

TL;DR: Retrospective growth analyses of eight stock/sea age components show that post-smolt growth during summer is positively correlated with salmon survival and recruitment, and the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation appears to be a more closely aligned climate forcing index than the North Atlantic O oscillation with respect to salmon recruitment.
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Projected sea surface temperatures over the 21st century: Changes in the mean, variability and extremes for large marine ecosystem regions of Northern Oceans

TL;DR: In this paper, global climate models were used to assess changes in the mean, variability and extreme sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in northern oceans with a focus on large marine ecosystems (LMEs) adjacent to North America, Europe, and the Arctic Ocean.