Sex differences in diet and foraging behaviour are common in sexually dimorphic species, often driven by differences in the cost of locomotion or ability to exploit different ecological niches. However, sex-specific foraging strategies also occur in monomorphic or slightly dimorphic species where the drivers are poorly understood. Here, we study sex differences in foraging of northern gannets (Morus bassanus), where females are only slightly heavier than males. Using concurrently tracked gannets (298 full foraging trips from 81 individuals) and fishing vessels across 5 years, we quantify individual-based vessel-associated putative foraging, and relate this to discard consumption. We found a significant positive relationship between time spe...
Current fishing extraction methods often generate huge quantities of dead or dying biomass that is r...
Sex differences in foraging behaviour are typically studied in size-dimorphic taxa. Data on sex-spec...
Many animals show sexually divergent foraging behaviours reflecting different physiological constrai...
We would like to thank all those involved in fieldwork as well as the Neale family for permitting wo...
Sex-specific niche differentiation is common in marine vertebrates, but how this varies longterm is ...
Sexual segregation, common in many species, is usually attributed to intra-specific competition or h...
Sexual segregation in foraging and migratory behaviour is widespread among sexually dimorphic marine...
Sexual segregation in seabirds can take place during both the breeding and interbreeding period, but...
Sex-specific niche differentiation is common in marine vertebrates, but how this varies long-term is...
Sexual segregation in foraging and migratory behaviour is widespread among sexually dimorphic marine...
1. Sexual segregation in foraging strategies has been little studied in marine species with slight s...
Individual specialisations in animals are important contributors to a wide range of ecological and e...
Acknowledgements. Research was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (GW4+ Doctoral Tra...
Sexual differences in the foraging behaviour of parents have been observed in a number of sexually s...
15 pages, 3 figures, 4 tables, supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.6084...
Current fishing extraction methods often generate huge quantities of dead or dying biomass that is r...
Sex differences in foraging behaviour are typically studied in size-dimorphic taxa. Data on sex-spec...
Many animals show sexually divergent foraging behaviours reflecting different physiological constrai...
We would like to thank all those involved in fieldwork as well as the Neale family for permitting wo...
Sex-specific niche differentiation is common in marine vertebrates, but how this varies longterm is ...
Sexual segregation, common in many species, is usually attributed to intra-specific competition or h...
Sexual segregation in foraging and migratory behaviour is widespread among sexually dimorphic marine...
Sexual segregation in seabirds can take place during both the breeding and interbreeding period, but...
Sex-specific niche differentiation is common in marine vertebrates, but how this varies long-term is...
Sexual segregation in foraging and migratory behaviour is widespread among sexually dimorphic marine...
1. Sexual segregation in foraging strategies has been little studied in marine species with slight s...
Individual specialisations in animals are important contributors to a wide range of ecological and e...
Acknowledgements. Research was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (GW4+ Doctoral Tra...
Sexual differences in the foraging behaviour of parents have been observed in a number of sexually s...
15 pages, 3 figures, 4 tables, supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.6084...
Current fishing extraction methods often generate huge quantities of dead or dying biomass that is r...
Sex differences in foraging behaviour are typically studied in size-dimorphic taxa. Data on sex-spec...
Many animals show sexually divergent foraging behaviours reflecting different physiological constrai...