Hannes Baumann, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor University of Connecticut

  • Groton CT

Hannes Baumann is an expert in coastal fish ecology and effects of marine climate change

Contact

University of Connecticut

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Biography

Hannes Baumann studies how fish populations are adapted to environmental variability and how they may therefore cope with unfolding marine climate change, i.e., ocean warming, acidification and oxygen decline. It also includes changes to the marine food web and natural mortality patterns such as fisheries exploitation and selection. He uses experimental, field, and modeling approaches with tools including otolith microstructure and microchemistry, fish physiology, population dynamics, and evolutionary genetics. At the University of Connecticut, he has established the Fisheries Ecology Lab as a leader in experimental research on coastal forage fish such as silversides or sand lances.

Areas of Expertise

Evolution
Oceanography
Marine Science
Fish Populations
Marine Climate Change

Education

Hamburg University

Ph.D

Fisheries Biology

2006

Kiel University

M.S.

Fisheries Biology

2002

Media Appearances

UConn seeks to help sturgeons make a comeback to the state

Fox 61  tv

2022-05-05

UConn Associate Professor Dr. Hannes Baumann discusses the university raising awareness of wildlife conservation efforts.

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For Marine Species, Hidden Divisions Abound

Hakai Magazine  online

2023-02-24

On land, rivers and mountain ranges can divide species into genetically distinct populations. In the vast expanse of the ocean, where there is seemingly little to stop fish and other sea creatures from going where they please, scientists have long expected marine species to find it easier to mix. But ongoing research shows there’s more than just geographic barriers keeping populations separate, and marine species often have a higher genetic diversity than anticipated.

Hannes Baumann, a marine scientist at the University of Connecticut, says that for years the prevailing notion was that species in the ocean didn’t form separate populations. “But the last 20 years has demolished that concept,” he says. “Now everywhere we look we see differentiation.”

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Ocean acidification reduces the hatching success of a keystone fish species

Earth.com  online

2022-04-12

A new, experimental study has found that an important forage fish called sand lance is very sensitive to ocean acidification and this could lead to widespread ecosystem impacts by 2100.

Sand lance spawn in offshore environments that tend to have stable, low levels of CO2 during the winter, explains lead author Hannes Baumann.

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Research Grants

Collaborative research: The genomic underpinnings of local adaptation despite gene flow along a coastal environmental cline

NSF-OCE

2018
Therkildsen, N. and Baumann, H.

Sensitivity of larval and juvenile sand lance Ammodytes dubius on Stellwagen Bank to predicted ocean warming, acidification, and deoxygenation

Northeast Regional SeaGrant Consortium

2016
Baumann, H., Wiley, D. Kaufman, L., Valentine, P., and Gallager, S.

Collaborative research: Understanding the effects of acidification and hypoxia within and across generations in a coastal marine fish`

NSF Project

2016
Baumann, H. and Nye, J.

Articles

Contrasting genomic shifts underlie parallel phenotypic evolution in response to fishing

Science

2019

Fish populations respond rapidly to fishing pressure. Within a handful of generations, marked phenotypic change can occur—often to smaller body sizes, because it is the big fish that are usually extracted. Therkildsen et al. examined wild ancestor fish lineages and found that polygenic mechanisms underpin this rapid evolutionary capacity (see the Perspective by Jørgensen and Enberg).

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Citizen science observations reveal rapid, multi-decadal ecosystem changes in eastern Long Island Sound

Marine Environmental Research

2019

Long-term environmental records are among the most valuable assets for understanding the trajectory and consequences of climate change. Here we report on a newly recovered time-series from Project Oceanology, a non-profit ocean science organization serving New England schools (USA) since 1972. As part of its educational mission, Project Oceanology has routinely and consistently recorded water temperature, pH, and oxygen as well as invertebrate and fish abundance in nearshore waters of the Thames River estuary in eastern Long Island Sound (LIS). We digitized these long-term records to test for decadal trends in abiotic and biotic variables including shifts in species abundance, richness, and diversity.

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Experimental assessments of marine species sensitivities to ocean acidification and co-stressors: how far have we come?

Canadian Journal of Zoology

2019

Experimental studies assessing the potential impacts of ocean acidification on marine organisms have rapidly expanded and produced a wealth of empirical data over the past decade. This perspective examines four key areas of transformative developments in experimental approaches.

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