Hi Trevor,
I expect for humpbacks you are more likely to find seabird remains in stomach 
contents rather than fecal samples, but that's a guess. However, I just wanted 
to point out that if you or anyone out there retrieves a humpback stomach with 
something they think might be bird bone, it would be a relatively quick and 
easy job for me to ID those for sure. I have been doing pinniped stomach and 
scat analysis for more than 15 years now and also do archaeological bone ID 
from coastal sites (fish, bird and mammal). Occasionally, I encounter sea bird 
(and also other sea mammal remains) in scats from Steller sea lions, which I 
always ID when I can. Often, there are only bits of vertebrae or foot bones 
left, but I can still use those for ID. It takes very little time for a few 
bones like this and is thus quite low cost, so it is probably worth checking 
out if you've got samples that are suspect. 

Best regards,
Susan

Susan Crockford, Ph.D. (Zoology/Evolutionary Biology/Archaeozoology)
Pacific Identifications Inc.,
6011 Oldfield Rd., Victoria, B.C.  V9E 2J4
(250) 721-7296  fax (250) 721-6215
[email protected]  www.pacificid.com

Adjunct Professor (Anthropology & Faculty of Graduate Studies)
University of Victoria, B.C.
[email protected]
book website www.rhythmsoflife.ca
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Trevor Haynes 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, December 21, 2008 1:41 PM
  Subject: [MARMAM] Whale-Seabird interactions: whales ingesting seabirds


        Hi All,
        A topic for those who might be interested in cetacean-seabird 
interactions. We are just concluding a study focused on seabird forage flocks 
in southeast Alaska. We found that humpbacks often feed at seabird forage 
flocks, targeting the capelin that the flocks have trapped at the surface. We 
noted lunge feeding humpbacks ingesting seabirds during these feeding events. 
Given the relatively high frequency with which humpbacks were found feeding at 
forage flocks in our study area, there seemed to be a high potential for 
seabirds to be taken incidentally by whales. This sparked our interest in 
tracking down documented instances of whales ingesting seabirds or seabirds 
turning up in whale fecal samples.


        We've tracked down a few sightings of seabirds being ingested by whales 
from scientists in the Pacific. Recently, on a seabird listserv, there has been 
discussion on this topic. It generated a lot of interest and helped track down 
more sightings. I'm hoping that the MARMAM community can add more sightings of 
seabird ingestion or of seabirds in cetacean fecal matter and generate more 
discussion on the topic. Considering there are regions such as SE Alaska 
experiencing an increase in whale populations, seabird-cetacean interactions 
have the potential to occur more frequently.


        Cheers
        Trevor Haynes
        Oregon State University
        Department of Fisheries and Wildlife
        Email: [email protected]
       


------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Looking for the perfect gift? Give the gift of Flickr!


------------------------------------------------------------------------------


  _______________________________________________
  MARMAM mailing list
  [email protected]
  https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to