Human provisioning (feeding) of otherwise wild animals has been shown to significantly alter their body condition and behavior as compared to other members of the population. However, the vast majority of these studies tends to focus on either physiology or behavior, and thus do not provide a holistic assessment of the impact of provisioning. The recent population boom of grey seals (Halichoerus grypus) in the western Atlantic and their proximity to humans makes them an ideal candidate for such a study. Morphological data was collected and GPS tags deployed for several seals in Chatham Harbor, Massachusetts in June 2013. Movement analysis suggested one seal was provisioned via the Chatham Fish Pier, and the assumption was later verified by ...
Effective management of wildlife resources depends on understanding and cooperating with the human u...
1.Incidental mortality (bycatch) in fisheries remains the greatest threat to many large marine verte...
Males and females transmit and receive signals prior to mating that convey information such as sex, ...
Ocean acidification, caused by the uptake of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere, is impacting ...
Climate change combined with an ever-increasing human footprint is strongly impacting the polar ecos...
The risk of mortality associated with a long-distance migration will depend on an animal's physiolog...
Harvested marine fish stocks often show a rapid and substantial decline in the age and size at matur...
White sharks Carcharodon carcharias are highly visual predators, leading to the hypothesis that the ...
This study aims to improve the understanding of the establishment success of Micropterus salmoides b...
Aim: To predict the at‐sea distribution of chinstrap penguins across the South Orkney Islands and t...
Climate change and harvesting can affect the ecosystems' functioning by altering the population dyn...
As pressure on coastal marine resources is increasing globally, the need to quantitatively assess vu...
Host–parasite systems have been useful in understanding coevolutionary patterns in sympatric species...
Natural selection is inherently a multivariate phenomenon. The selection pressure on size (natural a...
Evidence for phenotypic plasticity in brain size and the size of different brain parts is widespread...
Effective management of wildlife resources depends on understanding and cooperating with the human u...
1.Incidental mortality (bycatch) in fisheries remains the greatest threat to many large marine verte...
Males and females transmit and receive signals prior to mating that convey information such as sex, ...
Ocean acidification, caused by the uptake of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere, is impacting ...
Climate change combined with an ever-increasing human footprint is strongly impacting the polar ecos...
The risk of mortality associated with a long-distance migration will depend on an animal's physiolog...
Harvested marine fish stocks often show a rapid and substantial decline in the age and size at matur...
White sharks Carcharodon carcharias are highly visual predators, leading to the hypothesis that the ...
This study aims to improve the understanding of the establishment success of Micropterus salmoides b...
Aim: To predict the at‐sea distribution of chinstrap penguins across the South Orkney Islands and t...
Climate change and harvesting can affect the ecosystems' functioning by altering the population dyn...
As pressure on coastal marine resources is increasing globally, the need to quantitatively assess vu...
Host–parasite systems have been useful in understanding coevolutionary patterns in sympatric species...
Natural selection is inherently a multivariate phenomenon. The selection pressure on size (natural a...
Evidence for phenotypic plasticity in brain size and the size of different brain parts is widespread...
Effective management of wildlife resources depends on understanding and cooperating with the human u...
1.Incidental mortality (bycatch) in fisheries remains the greatest threat to many large marine verte...
Males and females transmit and receive signals prior to mating that convey information such as sex, ...