25 research outputs found
NOTES ON BEHAVIOR AND BREEDING OF THE RAZO LARK ALAUDA-RASAE
Volume: 109Start Page: 82End Page: 8
NOTES ON NEW AND RARE MIGRANTS IN THE CAPE VERDE ISLANDS NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
Volume: 110Start Page: 207End Page: 21
FURTHER NOTES ON MIGRANTS IN THE CAPE VERDE ISLANDS
Volume: 112Start Page: 61End Page: 6
A record of blue-cheeked bee-eater Merops persicus from the Cape Verde Islands and status of the species in West Africa
Volume: 116Start Page: 50End Page: 5
Notes on birds from the Cape Verde Islands in the collection of the Centro de Zoologia, Lisbon, with comments on taxonomy and distribution
Volume: 119Start Page: 25End Page: 3
Rediscovery of the Cape Verde Cane Warbler Acrocephalus brevipennis on Sao Nicolau in February 1998
Volume: 119Start Page: 68End Page: 7
Does sexual segregation occur during the non-breeding period?: A comparative analysis in spatial and feeding ecology of three Calonectris shearwaters (Raw data)
Data: Stable isotope values of the 13th secondary feather as a proxy of trophic level and diet; Geolocation-immersion loggers data to infer spatio-temporal distribution and migratory phenology.Localització: Las colonias de cría de las aves estudiadas en el artículo son en España (Pantaleu islet, Balearic Islands; Montaña Clara, Canary
Islands; Veneguera, Canary Islands), Portugal (Vila islet, Azores Islands) y Cabo Verde (Curral Velho islet).Dades primàries associades a l'article publicat a Ecology and Evolution, vol 9, núm. 18, p. 10145-10162, 2019 disponible a https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5501We evaluated the degree of sexual segregation (SS) in the feeding ecology, in the choice of main non-breeding areas, in behaviour and in migratory phenology of three closely related shearwaters: Scopoli’s, Cory’s and Cape Verde shearwaters (Calonectris diomedea, C. borealis and C. edwardsii, respectively) during the non-breeding period in relation to the conditions of their different life strategies. The main objective of the study is to better understand the ecological and evolutionary role of sex on the spatial, behavioural and feeding ecology of birds during the non-breeding period, since most studies on birds have focused on the breeding period. The referred issues were addressed through a multidisciplinary approach combining geolocation and stable isotope data