Prof. Dr. Evgeny Alexandrovich Pakhomov

Profile

Academic positionAssociate Professor, Senior Lecturer, Reader
Research fieldsOceanography,Animal Biochemistry and Physiology
KeywordsAntarctic, Biology, Mesopelagic, Climate Change, Ecophysiology

Current contact address

CountryCanada
CityVancouver
InstitutionUniversity of British Columbia
InstituteDepartment of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences

Host during sponsorship

Prof. Dr. Ulrich BathmannSektion Biologische Ozeanographie, Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung (AWI), Bremerhaven
Start of initial sponsorship01/12/2001

Programme(s)

2001Humboldt Research Fellowship Programme

Publications (partial selection)

2006Kerry Scolardi, Kendra Daly, Evgeny Pakhomov, Joseph Torres: Feeding ecology and metabolism of the Antarctic cydippid ctenophore Callianira antarctica. In: Marine Ecology Progress Series, 2006, 111-126
2006Evgeny Pakhomov, C. Dubischar, V. Strass, M. Brichta, U. Bathmann The tunicate Salpa thompsoni ecology in the Southern Ocean. – I. Distribution, biomass, demography and feeding ecophysiology. In: Marine Biology, 2006, 609-623
2006Corinna Dubischar, Evgeny Pakhomov, Ulrich Bathmann: The tunicate Salpa thompsoni ecology in the Southern Ocean. – II. Proximate and elemental composition. In: Marine Biology, 2006, 629-632
2004Evgeny Pakhomov, Angus Atkinson, Bettina Meyer, Bernadet Oettl, Ulrich Bathmann: Daily rations and growth of larval Euphausia superba in the Eastern Bellingshausen Sea during austral autumn. In: Deep Sea Research II, 2004, 2185-2198
2003Evgeny Pakhomov, V. Fuentes, I. Schloss, A. Atencio, G.B. Esnal: Beaching of the tunicate Salpa thompsoni at high levels of suspended particulate matter in the Southern Ocean. In: Polar Biology, 2003, 427-431
2002Angus Atkinson, Volker Siegel, Evgeny Pakhomov, Peter Rothery: Long-term decline in krill stock and increase in salps within the Southern Ocean. In: Nature, 2002, 100-103
2002Evgeny Pakhomov, Sven Kaehler, Christopher McQuaid: Zooplankton community structure in the kelp beds of the sub-Antarctic Prince Edward Archipelago: are they a refuge for larval stages?. In: Polar Biology, 2002, 778-788