Postdoc, PhD
Katja Enberg

Man harvests fish stocks at increasing rate. Unfortunately, fisheries have lead to overharvesting and collapse of many harvested stocks worldwide. How can we help these stocks to recover, and what can we learn from these collapses and possible recoveries? Is it in the first place even possible to avoid such collapses, and harvest marine resources sustainably? Moreover, if we manage to achieve sustainability in the short term, what long term consequences will this 'sustainable harvesting' have? Is it also evolutionarily sustainable?

In my research I try to understand with the help of ecological, evolutionary, and statistical modelling how populations and species work. I explore the effects of fisheries, which has a tremendous effect on the survival of the targeted species: in many cases, fishing mortality exceed natural mortality manifold. It is self evident that such altered survival will affect target species in many ways. I am particularly interested in how fisheries affect 1) life-history traits, 2) population dynamics, and 3) evolutionary dynamics of the harvested species. I am also interested in the effects of environmental variability on population and evolutionary dynamics.

Biography
I started my career with fish with my MSc-thesis, in which I studied aggressive behaviour of juvenile salmonids (see papers on inter-population variation in aggressive behaviour and growth rate and social status and genetic variation). During my MSc studies I also spent 6 months in Imperial College, London, where I studied density-dependent growth with Kai Lorenzen. For my PhD-thesis I changed into more theoretical approach and studied various issues related to sustainable harvesting using population modelling: I explored harvesting strategies, multispecies harvesting, marine reserves, environmental fluctuations. For both MSc and PhD I studied at the University of Helsinki, Finland, under supervision of Anssi Laurila & Katriina Tiira (for MSc) and Esa Ranta & Veijo Kaitala (for PhD).

During my post doc with Ulf Dieckmann in the Evolution and Ecology Progam at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA, April 2006-March 2007) I became familiar with evolutionary and individual-based modelling. I was funded by the EU-project UNCOVER, and became affiliated also with the Marie Curie research training network FishACE. Currently I am funded by the Bergen Research Foundation, on a three-year postdoc position.

 

       My Main Page
       My Publications
       Curriculum Vitae
Research group
 
Discipline
  Evolutionary ecology
Email
  katja.enberg@bio.uib.no
Phone/Fax
 
Office: (+47)  55 58 42 46
Fax: (+47)  55 58 44 50
Postal address
  Department of Biology
University of Bergen
PO Box 7803
N-5020 Bergen
Norway
Office location
  Office 216 H1
2nd Floor
Biology Building
Høyteknologisenteret
Thormøhlensgt. 55
Links
  The Modelling Group

Department of Biology, University of Bergen