Far From Land The Mysterious Lives of Seabirds

(vip2019) #1

226 | Notes to Chapter 6



  1. Sala, J.E., Wilson, R.P., Frere, E. and Quintana, F. 2012. Foraging effort in
    Magellanic penguins in coastal Patagonia, Argentina. Marine Ecology Progress
    Series 464 : 273– 87.

  2. Oppel, S., Beard, A., Fox, D., Mackley, E. et al. 2015. Foraging distribution
    of a tropical seabird supports Ashmole’s hypothesis of population regula-
    tion. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 69 : 915– 26.

  3. Furness, R.W. and Birkhead, T.R. 1984. Seabird colony distributions sug-
    gest competition for food supplies during the breeding season. Nature 31 :
    655– 6.

  4. Wakefield, E.D., Bodey, T.W., Bearhop, S., Blackburn, J. et al. 2013. Space
    partitioning without territoriality in Gannets. Science 341 : 68– 70.

  5. Dean, B., Freeman, R., Kirk, H., Leonard, K. et al. 2013. Behavioural
    mapping of a pelagic seabird: Combining multiple sensors and a hidden
    Markov model reveals the distribution of at- sea behaviour. Journal of the
    Royal Society Interface 10 : 20120570. Doi: 10.1098/rsif.2012.0570.

  6. Evans, J.C., Dall, S.R.X., Bolton, M., Owen, E. et al. 2016. Social foraging
    European shags: GPS tracking reveals birds from neighbouring colonies
    have shared foraging grounds. Journal of Ornithology 157 : 23– 32.

  7. Whitehead, T.O., Kato, A., Ropert- Coudert, Y. and Ryan P.G. 2016. Habitat
    use and diving behaviour of Macaroni Eudyptes chrysolophus and Eastern
    Rockhopper E. chrysocome filholi Penguins during the critical pre- moult
    period. Marine Biology 163 : 19. Doi: 10.1007/s00227- 015- 2794- 6.

  8. Linnebjerg, J.F., Fort, J., Guilford, T., Reuleaux, A. et al. 2013. Sympatric
    breeding auks shift between dietary and spatial resource partitioning across
    the annual cycle. PLoS One 8 : e72987. Doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0072987.


Chapter 6. Wind and Waves: Friend and Foe



  1. Catry, P., Phillips, R.A. and Croxall, J.P. 2004. Sustained fast travel by a
    Gray- headed Albatross (Thalassarche chrysostoma) riding an Antarctic storm.
    Auk 121 : 1208– 13.

  2. http://yoda-ken.sakura.ne.jp/yoda_lab/English.html (accessed 14 June
    2017).

  3. Cotte, C., Park, Y.- H., Guinet, C. and Bost, C.- A. 2007. Movements of
    foraging King Penguins through marine mesoscale eddies. Proceedings of the
    Royal Society of London, B 274 : 2385– 91.

  4. Weimerskirch, H., Guionnet, T., Martin, J., Shaffer, S.A. et al. 2000. Fast
    and fuel efficient? Optimal use of wind by flying albatrosses. Proceedings of
    the Royal Society of London, B 267 : 1869– 74.

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