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Raul Primicerio

Researcher at Norwegian College of Fishery Science

Publications -  99
Citations -  4580

Raul Primicerio is an academic researcher from Norwegian College of Fishery Science. The author has contributed to research in topics: Arctic & Climate change. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 90 publications receiving 3672 citations. Previous affiliations of Raul Primicerio include University of Tromsø & Umeå University.

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Recent warming leads to a rapid borealization of fish communities in the Arctic

TL;DR: This article found that the recent warming in the Barents Sea has led to a change in spatial distribution of fish communities, with boreal communities expanding northwards at a pace reflecting the local climate velocities.
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Climate change alters the structure of arctic marine food webs due to poleward shifts of boreal generalists.

TL;DR: Structural changes at the food web level induced by poleward shifts via topological network analysis of highly resolved boreal and arctic food webs of the Barents Sea are addressed, revealing that habitats form natural boundaries for food web modules, and that generalists play an important functional role in coupling pelagic and benthic modules.
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Compositional differences in soybeans on the market: glyphosate accumulates in Roundup Ready GM soybeans.

TL;DR: Using 35 different nutritional and elemental variables to characterise each soy sample, it was able to discriminate GM, conventional and organic soybeans without exception, demonstrating "substantial non-equivalence" in compositional characteristics for 'ready-to-market' soybeans.
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Climate-driven regime shifts in Arctic marine benthos.

TL;DR: The abrupt, substantial, and persistent nature of the changes observed is indicative of a climate-driven ecological regime shift, and the ecological processes thought to drive the observed regime shifts are likely to promote the borealization of these Arctic marine communities in the coming years.
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Culling prey promotes predator recovery--alternative states in a whole-lake experiment.

TL;DR: It is shown, for predators feeding on prey that exhibit food-dependent growth, that culling of fish prey may promote predator recovery and represents an experimental demonstration of an alternative stable state in a large-scale field system.