1996
DOI: 10.1111/j.1748-7692.1996.tb00604.x
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AERIAL BEHAVIOR IN FIN WHALES (BALAENOPTERA PHYSALUS) IN THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA

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Cited by 13 publications
(35 citation statements)
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References 4 publications
(3 reference statements)
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“…Sightings show an important individual rate from late winter to early spring with an indisputable connection to shallow waters of depths shallower than 250 m close to the coast. Similar behaviour was reported previously with 5-20 whales (Marini et al, 1995;Canese et al, 2006). Canese et al, 2006).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Sightings show an important individual rate from late winter to early spring with an indisputable connection to shallow waters of depths shallower than 250 m close to the coast. Similar behaviour was reported previously with 5-20 whales (Marini et al, 1995;Canese et al, 2006). Canese et al, 2006).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Few studies envisaged a possible migration through the Strait of Gibraltar, the only passage possible to the Atlantic Ocean (Viale, 1977;Guinet et al, 2007). Moreover, winter aggregations have been reported in the southern central Mediterranean (Marini et al, 1995) more specifically around the island of Lampedusa. The mitochondrial and nuclear loci differences point to a genetic isolation between the Atlantic and Mediterranean populations of fin whales (Bérubé et al, 1998).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The first would be that fin whales observed in the Mediterranean Sea represent a summer feeding population that breeds elsewhere during the winter as part of an eastern North Atlantic fin whale population, as is observed in North Atlantic humpback whales (Palsbøll et al 1995). However, the paucity of fin whale sightings and strandings in the Strait of Gibraltar and neighboring waters (Beaubrun 1995;Beaubrun and Roussel 2000;Fernández-Casado et al 2000), together with the existence of a fin whale wintering ground between Italy and the Mediterranean coasts of northern Africa (Marini et al 1995), seems inconsistent with the notion that Mediterranean Sea fin whales, which are estimated to number about 3500 individuals (Forcada et al 1996), migrate to and from the North Atlantic during the autumn and spring, respectively. Another possibility is occasional gene flow with a bias toward male-mediated gene flow between the current populations off Atlantic Spain and in the Mediterranean Sea.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Marini et al 1996a). Marini et al (1992Marini et al ( , 1996a proposed the first hypothesis to explain the fin whale seasonal cycle within the Mediterranean: the whales leave their primary Ligurian Sea feeding areas in winter when climatic conditions become less favourable, and use the Tyrrhenian Sea as a transit area to reach southern Mediterranean waters for breeding. In spring, the whales return to summer feeding areas, but also to areas in the eastern basin.…”
Section: Movement Patterns Of the Resident Mediterranean Fin Whales: mentioning
confidence: 99%