Journal
ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 22, Pages 16344-16353Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8224
Keywords
baleen; diet; migration; minke whale; stable isotopes
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Isotopic analyses of baleen in Mysticeti have been used to study their feeding and movement patterns, revealing differences in diet between whales caught at different locations and suggesting that whales primarily prey on fish, switching to zooplankton during the spring bloom. However, the data did not confirm whether the whales migrate over long distances.
Isotopic analyses of the incrementally growing baleen in Mysticeti have been used to learn about their feeding and movement patterns. Using methods previously applied to Pacific minke whales, stable delta N-15 and delta C-13 isotope values were measured along the baleen plates of male and female minke whales from two locations in the Northeast Atlantic. The sample sizes used in this study are comparable to those previously used in the literature, and, although limited in size, the evidence suggests differences in isotopic signatures between whales caught at different locations. Both the delta N-15 and delta C-13 data suggest whales at the higher latitude site of Svalbard have a narrower diet than the whales from Lofoten/Vesteralen in Norway. Across all whales, the delta N-15 data indicate the whales primarily prey on fish for much of the year, only switching to zooplankton during the spring bloom. The delta C-13 data fail to confirm whether the whales migrate over long distances.
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