作者
Danuta Maria Wisniewska, Mark Johnson, Jonas Teilmann, Laia Rojano-Donate, Jeanne Shearer, Signe Sveegaard, Lee A Miller, Ursula Siebert, Peter Teglberg Madsen
发表日期
2016/6/6
期刊
Current Biology
卷号
26
期号
11
页码范围
1441-1446
出版商
Elsevier
简介
The question of how individuals acquire and allocate resources to maximize fitness is central in evolutionary ecology. Basic information on prey selection, search effort, and capture rates are critical for understanding a predator's role in its ecosystem and for predicting its response to natural and anthropogenic disturbance. Yet, for most marine species, foraging interactions cannot be observed directly. The high costs of thermoregulation in water require that small marine mammals have elevated energy intakes compared to similar-sized terrestrial mammals [1]. The combination of high food requirements and their position at the apex of most marine food webs may make small marine mammals particularly vulnerable to changes within the ecosystem [2–4], but the lack of detailed information about their foraging behavior often precludes an informed conservation effort. Here, we use high-resolution movement and prey …
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