Far From Land The Mysterious Lives of Seabirds

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230 | Notes to Chapter 8



  1. Patrick, S.C. and Weimerskirch, H. 2014. Consistency pays: Sex differences
    and fitness consequences of behavioural specialization in a wide- ranging
    seabird. Biology Letters 10 : 20140630. Doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2014.0630.


Chapter 8. Where Seabirds Find Food



  1. Burger, A.E. 1997. Arrival and departure behavior of Common Murres at
    colonies: Evidence for an information halo? Colonial Waterbirds 20 : 55– 65.

  2. Weimerskirch, H., Bertrand, S., Silva, J., Marques, J.C. et al. 2010. Use of
    social information in seabirds: Compass rafts indicate the heading of food
    patches. PLoS One 5 : e9928. Doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0009928.

  3. Ballance, L.T., Pitman, R.L. and Reilly, S.B. 1997. Seabird community
    structure along a productivity gradient: Importance of competition and
    energetic constraint. Ecology 78 : 1502– 18.

  4. Nevitt, G.A., Losekoot, M. and Weimerskirch, H. 2008. Evidence for
    olfactory search in Wandering Albatross, Diomedea exulans. Proceedings of
    the National Academy of Sciences USA 105 : 4576– 81.

  5. Grémillet, D., Fort, J., Amélineau, F., Zakharova, E. et al. 2015. Arctic
    warming: Nonlinear impacts of sea- ice and glacier melt on seabird foraging.
    Global Change Biology 21 : 1116– 23.

  6. Bost, C.- A., Charrassin, J.B., Clerquin, Y., Ropert- Coudert, Y. et al. 2004.
    Exploitation of distant marginal ice zones by king penguins during winter.
    Marine Ecology Progress Series 283 : 293– 7.

  7. Wakefield, E.D., Phillips, R.A. and Belchier, M. 2012. Foraging black-
    browed albatrosses target waters overlaying moraine banks – a consequence
    of upward benthic- pelagic coupling? Antarctic Science 24 : 269– 80.

  8. Freeman, R., Todd, D., Landers T., Thompson, D. et al. 2010. Black Petrels
    (Procellaria parkinsoni) patrol the ocean shelf- break: GPS tracking of a
    vulnerable procellariiform seabird. PLoS One 5 : e9236. Doi: 10.1371/journal.
    pone.0009236.

  9. Imber, M.J. 1999. Diet and feeding ecology of the Royal Albatross Diomedea
    epomophora – King of the shelf break and inner slope. Emu 99 : 200– 11.

  10. Waugh, S., Filippi, D., Fukuda, A., Suzuki, M. et al. 2005. Foraging of royal
    albatrosses, Diomedea epomophora, from the Otago Peninsula and its relation-
    ships to fisheries. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 62 : 1410– 21.

  11. Dean, B., Kirk, H., Fayet, A., Freeman, R. et al. 2015. Simultaneous multi-
    colony tracking of a pelagic seabird reveals cross- colony utilization of a
    shared foraging area. Marine Ecology Progress Series 538 : 239– 48.

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