Prey species consumed by tracked kittiwakes during trips to shelf and basin habitats.
Rosana Paredes
Rachael A. Orben
Robert M. Suryan
David B. Irons
Daniel D. Roby
Ann M. A. Harding
Rebecca C. Young
Kelly Benoit-Bird
Carol Ladd
Heather Renner
Scott Heppell
Richard A. Phillips
Alexander Kitaysky
10.1371/journal.pone.0092520.g006
https://plos.figshare.com/articles/figure/_Prey_species_consumed_by_tracked_kittiwakes_during_trips_to_shelf_and_basin_habitats_/975155
<p>Percentages are based on the total number of samples (<i>n</i>) of trips to each habitat. “Other fish”: eelpout, rockfish, and gadids; “Crustaceans”: amphipods and euphausiids; “Others”: amphipods and sea nettle. Empty samples from stomach lavages were only found from birds that traveled to the shelf in 2008.</p>
2014-03-26 03:01:12
Biochemistry
hormones
ecology
Behavioral ecology
ecosystems
Marine ecology
Population ecology
Spatial and landscape ecology
Population biology
Population Dynamics
Zoology
Avian biology
marine and aquatic sciences
Aquatic environments
Marine environments
Bioindicators
Conservation science
consumed
tracked
kittiwakes
trips
basin