ABSTRACT Recent research has shown that calcium isotopes are fractionated by metabolic processes, leading to a decrease in 44Ca/40Ca ratio with increasing trophic level. If so, calcium isotopes could provide information on trophic relationships within foodwebs millions of years older than what we have been able to study thus far with alternative methods (i.e., nitrogen isotopes (δ15N), Sr/Ca). To explore whether δ44Ca values provided marine trophic level information, we measured the δ44Ca composition of tooth enamel and bone from modern marine mammals representing a 2.5 order range in trophic level. Marine mammal enamel δ44Ca values clustered into two groups—mammals foraging on vegetation or invertebrates exhibited higher δ44Ca values than ...