Southern Ocean humpback whale trophic ecology. II. Influence of fasting and opportunistic feeding on skin stable isotope values of migrating whales
Kylie Owen(Swedish Museum of Natural History), R Dunlop(The University of Queensland), David Donnelly, Michael J. Noad(The University of Queensland), MH Pinkerton(National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research), RM Thompson(University of Canberra), SJ Bury(National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research)
Cited by 4
Related Papers
Niche partitioning by three Pterodroma petrel species during non-breeding in the equatorial Pacific Ocean
|Marine Ecology Progress Series|2016|44
Foraging ecology of the common dolphin Delphinus delphis revealed by stable isotope analysis
|Marine Ecology Progress Series|2020|33
Latitudinal gradient consistency in carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes of particulate organic matter in the Southern Ocean
|Marine Ecology Progress Series|2019|32
Southern Ocean humpback whale trophic ecology. I. Combining multiple stable isotope methods elucidates diet, trophic position and foraging areas
|Marine Ecology Progress Series|2024|15
Non-breeding distribution and activity patterns in a temperate population of brown skua
|Marine Ecology Progress Series|2018|11