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