Carrion consumption by scavengers is a key component of both terrestrial and aquatic food webs. However, there are few direct comparisons of the structure and functioning of scavenging communities in different ecosystems. Here, we monitored the consumption of 23 fish (seabream Sparus aurata) and 34 bird (yellow-legged gull Larus michahellis) carcasses on a small Mediterranean island (Isla Grosa, southeastern Spain) and surrounding waters in summer to compare the structure of the scavenger assemblages and their carrion consumption efficiencies in terrestrial and shallow water habitats. Scavenging was highly efficient both in marine and terrestrial environments, especially in the presence of a highly abundant vertebrate scavenger species, the...
Abiotic and biotic factors modulate carcass consumption by scavengers, affecting ecosystem functioni...
Food webs near the interface of adjacent ecosystems are potentially subsidised by the flux of organi...
Food webs near the interface of adjacent ecosystems are potentially subsidised by the flux of organi...
Carrion consumption by scavengers is a key component of both terrestrial and aquatic food webs. Howe...
In light of current global changes to ecosystem function (e.g. climate change, trophic downgrading, ...
Invasive Alien Species (IAS) alter ecosystems, disrupting ecological processes and driving the loss...
Carrion use by terrestrial vertebrates is much more prevalent than conventional theory implies, and,...
Aim: Despite the increasing scientific evidence on the importance of carrion in the ecology and evol...
A scavenger is an animal that feeds on dead animals (carrion) that it has not killed itself. Fisheri...
Introduction The role of vertebrate scavenging in food web dynamics has historically been minimalize...
Despite its prevalence, the importance of scavenging to carnivores is difficult to ascertain in mode...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Nature Publishing Group via the DOI in this...
Carrion represents an important energy resource in the natural world, yet its ecological significanc...
Food webs near the interface of adjacent ecosystems are potentially subsidised by the flux of organi...
Species assemblages often have a non-random nested organization, which in vertebrate scavenger (carr...
Abiotic and biotic factors modulate carcass consumption by scavengers, affecting ecosystem functioni...
Food webs near the interface of adjacent ecosystems are potentially subsidised by the flux of organi...
Food webs near the interface of adjacent ecosystems are potentially subsidised by the flux of organi...
Carrion consumption by scavengers is a key component of both terrestrial and aquatic food webs. Howe...
In light of current global changes to ecosystem function (e.g. climate change, trophic downgrading, ...
Invasive Alien Species (IAS) alter ecosystems, disrupting ecological processes and driving the loss...
Carrion use by terrestrial vertebrates is much more prevalent than conventional theory implies, and,...
Aim: Despite the increasing scientific evidence on the importance of carrion in the ecology and evol...
A scavenger is an animal that feeds on dead animals (carrion) that it has not killed itself. Fisheri...
Introduction The role of vertebrate scavenging in food web dynamics has historically been minimalize...
Despite its prevalence, the importance of scavenging to carnivores is difficult to ascertain in mode...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Nature Publishing Group via the DOI in this...
Carrion represents an important energy resource in the natural world, yet its ecological significanc...
Food webs near the interface of adjacent ecosystems are potentially subsidised by the flux of organi...
Species assemblages often have a non-random nested organization, which in vertebrate scavenger (carr...
Abiotic and biotic factors modulate carcass consumption by scavengers, affecting ecosystem functioni...
Food webs near the interface of adjacent ecosystems are potentially subsidised by the flux of organi...
Food webs near the interface of adjacent ecosystems are potentially subsidised by the flux of organi...