SEAPOP

SEAPOP

About seabirds – for a richer ocean

  • Norsk
  • Home
  • Activities and scope
    • Mapping
      • Coastal populations
      • Populations at sea
      • Migrations and habitat use
    • Population sizes
    • Monitoring
      • Population development
        • Breeding populations
        • Winter poulations
        • Populations at sea
      • Reproduction
      • Survival
      • Diet
      • Phenology
    • Methods
      • Mapping along the coast
      • Mapping at sea
        • Study areas
        • Data analysis
      • Mapping migration and habitat use
      • Methods for calculating population sizes
      • Monitoring
    • Species
    • Key sites
    • Causal research
  • Distribution and status
    • Distribution
      • Breeding populations
      • Non-breeding populations
      • Seabirds at sea
    • Time series data
      • Population development
      • Reproduction
      • Survival
      • Diet
      • Phenology
  • SEATRACK
  • Publications
  • About SEAPOP
    • Executive institutions and Science Group
    • Economic contributors and Steering Committee
    • Other contributors
    • Contact us
    • News
SEAPOP  →  Publikasjoner  →  Other publications  →  Regime shifts in the breeding of an Atlantic puffin population

Regime shifts in the breeding of an Atlantic puffin population

Durant, J.M., Anker-Nilssen, T., Hjermann, D.Ø. & Stenseth, N.C. 2004. Regime shifts in the breeding of an Atlantic puffin population. Ecology Letters 7: 388-394.

This is SEAPOP

Program description

Maps and data

Contact us

Find specific people

Facebook

Twitter

Executive institutions

Norwegian institute for nature research

Norwegian Polar Institute

Design and development: Gnist Design

  • Home
  • Activities and scope
    • Mapping
      • Coastal populations
      • Populations at sea
      • Migrations and habitat use
    • Population sizes
    • Monitoring
      • Population development
        • Breeding populations
        • Winter poulations
        • Populations at sea
      • Reproduction
      • Survival
      • Diet
      • Phenology
    • Methods
      • Mapping along the coast
      • Mapping at sea
        • Study areas
        • Data analysis
      • Mapping migration and habitat use
      • Methods for calculating population sizes
      • Monitoring
    • Species
    • Key sites
    • Causal research
  • Distribution and status
    • Distribution
      • Breeding populations
      • Non-breeding populations
      • Seabirds at sea
    • Time series data
      • Population development
      • Reproduction
      • Survival
      • Diet
      • Phenology
  • SEATRACK
  • Publications
  • About SEAPOP
    • Executive institutions and Science Group
    • Economic contributors and Steering Committee
    • Other contributors
    • Contact us
    • News
  • Norsk