Stranding is the event in which a marine animal comes ashore after death or comes and is unable to return to the sea, which may occur due to natural, spatial tendencies and anthropic actions. It occurs in many countries, several of which have created formal programs to monitor. Mammals are at the top of the food chain, suffering more from changes in the environment, which is why they indicate the quality of the ecosystem. In the southern region of Brazil, inventories of marine mammal biodiversity emerged in the 1980s. Registering stranded data makes it possible to discover important information about marine animals and the oceans. This work aimed to collect information to identify the composition and abundance of strandings of marine mammal...
The Antillean manatee (Trichechus manatus manatus) is considered to be one of the most endangered aq...
This article presents the results of marine mammal occurrence at the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence in t...
The São Paulo state (SP) coast (23º18'S, 44º42'W; 25º14'S, 48º01'W) is of approximately 600 km in le...
ABSTRACT Marine mammal strandings provide valuable insights into local biodiversity. Strandings can ...
To assess the potential impacts on seabirds, turtles and marine mammals from oil and gas production ...
To assess the potential impacts on seabirds, turtles and marine mammals from oil and gas production ...
Marine mammal stranding events are used as an important tool for understanding cetacean biology worl...
Espírito Santo state is located on the eastern margin of Brazil, in a transitional tropical-subtropi...
Strandings of live or dead aquatic mammals constitute an important instrument to provide information...
The ecology and distribution of most baleen whales are poorly known in Brazilian waters, despite the...
Strandings of marine mammals are always an unusual occurrence. Whether the animals are living or dea...
The genus Kogia, which comprises only two extant species, Kogia sima and Kogia breviceps, represents...
<div><p>The genus <i>Kogia</i>, which comprises only two extant species, <i>Kogia sima</i> and <i>Ko...
Although international protection has been granted since 1935, southern right whales have only recen...
Over a decade ago, in August 1977, the First Marine Mammal Stranding Workshop was convened in Athen...
The Antillean manatee (Trichechus manatus manatus) is considered to be one of the most endangered aq...
This article presents the results of marine mammal occurrence at the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence in t...
The São Paulo state (SP) coast (23º18'S, 44º42'W; 25º14'S, 48º01'W) is of approximately 600 km in le...
ABSTRACT Marine mammal strandings provide valuable insights into local biodiversity. Strandings can ...
To assess the potential impacts on seabirds, turtles and marine mammals from oil and gas production ...
To assess the potential impacts on seabirds, turtles and marine mammals from oil and gas production ...
Marine mammal stranding events are used as an important tool for understanding cetacean biology worl...
Espírito Santo state is located on the eastern margin of Brazil, in a transitional tropical-subtropi...
Strandings of live or dead aquatic mammals constitute an important instrument to provide information...
The ecology and distribution of most baleen whales are poorly known in Brazilian waters, despite the...
Strandings of marine mammals are always an unusual occurrence. Whether the animals are living or dea...
The genus Kogia, which comprises only two extant species, Kogia sima and Kogia breviceps, represents...
<div><p>The genus <i>Kogia</i>, which comprises only two extant species, <i>Kogia sima</i> and <i>Ko...
Although international protection has been granted since 1935, southern right whales have only recen...
Over a decade ago, in August 1977, the First Marine Mammal Stranding Workshop was convened in Athen...
The Antillean manatee (Trichechus manatus manatus) is considered to be one of the most endangered aq...
This article presents the results of marine mammal occurrence at the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence in t...
The São Paulo state (SP) coast (23º18'S, 44º42'W; 25º14'S, 48º01'W) is of approximately 600 km in le...