Uugaq • Arctic Cod

Fish - Boreogadus saida

Arctic cod are believed to be one of the most abundant and widely distributed fish in the Arctic and are an integral part of sea ice ecosystems. When spring arrives in mid-April and early May, blooms of algae grow under sea ice as sunlight penetrates the melting ice. These organisms serve as the basis of the food web of sea ice ecosystems. Arctic cod feed on the copepods and amphipods that feed on the ice algae and each other. Because the cod are in turn eaten by many different kinds of fish, seabirds, and marine mammals, they are an important link between lower trophic levels and larger predators like narwhals, thick-billed murres, belugas, and ringed seals that occupy higher trophic levels.

Photo Credit: Hauke Flores

English

Term Dialect
Arctic cod (B. saida) Standard English
Polar cod (B. saida) Standard English
Rock cod Nunatsiavut English
Tomcod Standard English

Greenlandic

Term Dialect
Eqalugaq Kalaallisut
Uuaq Tunumiit oraasiat

Inuktut

Term Dialect
Ogak Nunatsiavummiutut
Uugaq Nunavimmiutitut - Sanikiluarmiut, South Qikiqtaaluk, North Qikiqtaaluk, Aivilingmiutut, Kivallirmiutut, Nattilingmiutut, Inuinnaqtun

Inupiaq

Term Dialect
Uugaq North Alaskan Iñupiaq

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