Authors
R Lewison, Daniel Oro, Brendan J Godley, L Underhill, Stuart Bearhop, RP Wilson, David Ainley, JM Arcos, P Dee Boersma, PG Borboroglu, Thierry Boulinier, Morten Frederiksen, M Genovart, Jacob González-Solís, JA Green, D Grémillet, KC Hamer, GM Hilton, KD Hyrenbach, Alejandro Martínez-Abraín, William A Montevecchi, Richard A Phillips, Peter G Ryan, P Sagar, WJ Sydeman, S Wanless, Y Watanuki, H Weimerskirch, P Yorio
Publication date
2012/5/8
Journal
Endangered Species Research
Volume
17
Issue
2
Pages
93-121
Description
Seabirds are facing a growing number of threats in both terrestrial and marine habitats, and many populations have experienced dramatic changes over past decades. Years of seabird research have improved our understanding of seabird populations and provided a broader understanding of marine ecological processes. In an effort to encourage future research and guide seabird conservation science, seabird researchers from 9 nations identified the 20 highest priority research questions and organized these into 6 general categories:(1) population dynamics,(2) spatial ecology,(3) tropho-dynamics,(4) fisheries interactions,(5) response to global change, and (6) management of anthropogenic impacts (focusing on invasive species, contaminants and protected areas). For each category, we provide an assessment of the current approaches, challenges and future directions. While this is not an exhaustive list of all …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Lewison, D Oro, BJ Godley, L Underhill, S Bearhop… - Endangered Species Research, 2012