Arctic regions of Alaska are important for cultural and economic sustainability and host a wide variety of wildlife species, many of which are of conservation and management interest to the U.S. Department of the Interior. The USGS and collaborators provide information about Arctic ecosystems that are used by Arctic residents, management agencies, and industry.
Return to Ecosystems
The USGS Changing Arctic Ecosystems Initiative:
This initiative has been a primary way for the USGS Alaska Science Center to conduct research and collaborations in the Arctic portions of Alaska. The objectives of this initiative are as follows:
- Quantify the responses of wildlife species and their habitats to ecosystem change in the Arctic,
- Provide projections of likely future wildlife and habitat responses, and
- Make information publicly available to inform land and species management decisions and Alaska Native subsistence and co-management council actions.
Research Conducted Through the Initiative:
The USGS conducts natural hazard and resource assessments of the Earth’s ecosystems and the response of those ecosystems to environmental change, human activities, and land use. Information on recent USGS assessments in the Arctic can be found on the USGS Arctic Ecosystems Assessments Factsheet and on this page.
USGS Changing Arctic Ecosystems initiative research and collaborations for 2025 – 2027 will focus on the following topics:
- Arctic Water Ecosystems (Rusting of Arctic Rivers, heat stress in salmon, and permafrost)
- New Capacities for Arctic Mammal Research (caribou, polar bears, walrus, and sea otters)
- Changes in the Distribution and Abundance of Arctic Birds
Past efforts of the USGS Changing Arctic Ecosystems Initiative have provided significant understanding and collaborations on the following topics. See the Science, Publications and Data tabs above for more information on these topics.
- Hydrology
- Wildlife Species of Management Concern
- Minimizing the Effects of Artic Energy Development on Wildlife
- Biosurveillance of Wildlife Pathogens in the Arctic
- Algal Toxins in the Arctic
The Rusting of Arctic Rivers
Orange streams are increasingly common in the Brooks Range of northern Alaska
Walrus Research
Working with management agencies and Alaska Native co-management partners
Nearshore Marine Ecosystem Research
Resources that have ecological, recreational, subsistence, and economic value
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Walrus Research
The Rusting of Arctic Rivers: Freshwater Ecosystems Respond to Rapidly Uptaking Metals
Assessing heat stress in migrating Yukon River Chinook Salmon
Polar Bear Research
Terrestrial Mammal Research
Nearshore Marine Ecosystem Research
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Pathogen Exposure Data for Chukchi Sea Polar Bears 1988-1994 and 2008-2017
Tracking Data for Black Brant (Branta bernicla nigricans)
Water Temperature, Electrical Conductivity, and Salinity of Lagoons in the Beaufort Sea, Alaska, 2017-2019
Estimated Post-Emergence Period for Denning Polar Bears of the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas
Morphological Measures of Pacific Walruses Collected in the Chukchi and Bering Seas 1972-1991
Diet Estimates of Southern Beaufort Sea Polar Bears, 2004-2016
Mercury Concentrations, Diet, and Gut Microbiota Diversity of Southern Beaufort Sea Polar Bears, 2008-2019
Southern Beaufort Sea Polar Bear Blood Based Analyte Data, 1983-2018
Avian Point Transect Survey, Seward Peninsula, Alaska, 2012
Avian Habitat Data; Seward Peninsula, Alaska, 2012
Juvenile Shorebird Morphological Data Collected in Alaska and Canada
Serological Survey Data for Francisella tularensis and Brucella spp. Exposure in Wildlife on the Arctic Coastal Plain of Alaska
Below are publications associated with this project.
Arctic fishes reveal patterns in radiocarbon age across habitats and with recent climate change
Assessing the population consequences of disturbance and climate change for the Pacific walrus
Development of an 8K SNP chip to assess adaptive diversity and hybridization in polar bears
Metal mobilization from thawing permafrost to aquatic ecosystems is driving rusting of Arctic streams
The dominance and growth of shallow groundwater resources in continuous permafrost environments
Local environmental conditions structured discrete fish assemblages in Arctic lagoons
A comparison of contemporary and historical hydrology and water quality in the foothills and coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, Arctic Slope, northern Alaska
Exploring effects of vessels on walrus behaviors using telemetry, automatic identification system data and matching
High winds and melting sea ice trigger landward movement in a polar bear population of concern
eDNA Metabarcoding Analyses of Diet in Yellow-Billed Loons of Northern Alaska
Increasing Alaskan river discharge during the cold season is driven by recent warming
Observed and forecasted changes in land use by polar bears in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, 1985–2040
Arctic regions of Alaska are important for cultural and economic sustainability and host a wide variety of wildlife species, many of which are of conservation and management interest to the U.S. Department of the Interior. The USGS and collaborators provide information about Arctic ecosystems that are used by Arctic residents, management agencies, and industry.
Return to Ecosystems
The USGS Changing Arctic Ecosystems Initiative:
This initiative has been a primary way for the USGS Alaska Science Center to conduct research and collaborations in the Arctic portions of Alaska. The objectives of this initiative are as follows:
- Quantify the responses of wildlife species and their habitats to ecosystem change in the Arctic,
- Provide projections of likely future wildlife and habitat responses, and
- Make information publicly available to inform land and species management decisions and Alaska Native subsistence and co-management council actions.
Research Conducted Through the Initiative:
The USGS conducts natural hazard and resource assessments of the Earth’s ecosystems and the response of those ecosystems to environmental change, human activities, and land use. Information on recent USGS assessments in the Arctic can be found on the USGS Arctic Ecosystems Assessments Factsheet and on this page.
USGS Changing Arctic Ecosystems initiative research and collaborations for 2025 – 2027 will focus on the following topics:
- Arctic Water Ecosystems (Rusting of Arctic Rivers, heat stress in salmon, and permafrost)
- New Capacities for Arctic Mammal Research (caribou, polar bears, walrus, and sea otters)
- Changes in the Distribution and Abundance of Arctic Birds
Past efforts of the USGS Changing Arctic Ecosystems Initiative have provided significant understanding and collaborations on the following topics. See the Science, Publications and Data tabs above for more information on these topics.
- Hydrology
- Wildlife Species of Management Concern
- Minimizing the Effects of Artic Energy Development on Wildlife
- Biosurveillance of Wildlife Pathogens in the Arctic
- Algal Toxins in the Arctic
The Rusting of Arctic Rivers
Orange streams are increasingly common in the Brooks Range of northern Alaska
Walrus Research
Working with management agencies and Alaska Native co-management partners
Nearshore Marine Ecosystem Research
Resources that have ecological, recreational, subsistence, and economic value
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Walrus Research
The Rusting of Arctic Rivers: Freshwater Ecosystems Respond to Rapidly Uptaking Metals
Assessing heat stress in migrating Yukon River Chinook Salmon
Polar Bear Research
Terrestrial Mammal Research
Nearshore Marine Ecosystem Research
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Pathogen Exposure Data for Chukchi Sea Polar Bears 1988-1994 and 2008-2017
Tracking Data for Black Brant (Branta bernicla nigricans)
Water Temperature, Electrical Conductivity, and Salinity of Lagoons in the Beaufort Sea, Alaska, 2017-2019
Estimated Post-Emergence Period for Denning Polar Bears of the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas
Morphological Measures of Pacific Walruses Collected in the Chukchi and Bering Seas 1972-1991
Diet Estimates of Southern Beaufort Sea Polar Bears, 2004-2016
Mercury Concentrations, Diet, and Gut Microbiota Diversity of Southern Beaufort Sea Polar Bears, 2008-2019
Southern Beaufort Sea Polar Bear Blood Based Analyte Data, 1983-2018
Avian Point Transect Survey, Seward Peninsula, Alaska, 2012
Avian Habitat Data; Seward Peninsula, Alaska, 2012
Juvenile Shorebird Morphological Data Collected in Alaska and Canada
Serological Survey Data for Francisella tularensis and Brucella spp. Exposure in Wildlife on the Arctic Coastal Plain of Alaska
Below are publications associated with this project.