The Skagerrak is habitat for approximately 2,000 marine species, many of them adapted to its waters. For example, a variety of
Atlantic cod called the Skagerrak cod spawns off the Norwegian coast. The eggs are buoyant and the hatchlings feed on
zooplankton. Juveniles sink to the bottom where they have a shorter maturity cycle (2 years). They do not migrate but remain local to Norwegian
fjords. The variety of habitats and the large volume of
plankton on the surface support prolific marine life. Energy moves from the top to the bottom according to
Vinogradov's ladder of migrations; that is, some species are
benthic and others
pelagic, but there are graded marine layers within which species move vertically for short distances. In addition, some species are
benthopelagic, moving between surface and bottom. The benthic species include
Coryphaenoides rupestris,
Argentina silus,
Etmopterus spinax,
Chimaera monstrosa and
Glyptocephalus cynoglossus. On the top are
Clupea harengus,
Scomber scombrus,
Sprattus sprattus. Some species that move between are
Pandalus borealis,
Sabinea sarsi,
Etmopterus spinax.
Reefs Apart from sandy and stony reefs, extensive cold water
coral reefs, mostly of
Lophelia, are growing in Skagerrak. The Säcken Reef in the Swedish marine protection of
Koster Fjord is an ancient cold water coral reef and the only known coral reef in the country. The Tisler Reef in the Norwegian marine protection of
Ytre Hvaler National Park is the largest known coral reef in Europe. Lophelia reefs are also present in the Norwegian trench and they are known from the shallow waters of many Norwegian fjords. Skagerrak also holds a number of rare
bubbling reefs; biological reefs formed around cold seeps of geological carbohydrate outgassings, usually
methane. These rare habitats are mostly known from the Danish waters of Skagerrak west of
Hirtshals, but more might be discovered in future surveys. Bubbling reefs are very rare in Europe and supports a very varied ecosystem. With the centuries-long heavy international seatraffic of Skagerrak, the seabed also holds an abundance of shipwrecks. Wrecks on shallow waters, provides a firm anchoring for several corals and polyps and explored wrecks have been revealed to support
Dead Man's Fingers corals,
Brittle stars and large
wolffish. A 2020 seafloor mapping project around Jammerbugten in Skaggerak, ran by Danish explorer
Klaus Thymann, found evidence of much greater biodiversity in a range seafloor habitats previously thought to be sandy with a low density of wildlife. Dead Man’s Fingers corals were again among the species documented for the first time in these coastal habitats. == Environmental concerns ==