2014
DOI: 10.1017/s0025315414000800
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North Atlantic killer whale research; past, present and future

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Cited by 7 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The female killer whale, ‘Morgan’, stranded on the coast of the Netherlands and was then transferred to the Harderwijk Dolfinarium. A comparison of Morgan’s mitochondrial DNA sequence and learned vocal repertoire with a North Atlantic database indicated that she originated from the population of killer whales that forages primarily on the Norwegian spring-spawning stock of Atlantic herring Clupea harengus 21 . A 10 ml sample of whole blood was taken and immediately stored in a PAXgene Blood DNA Tube and PAXgene Blood RNA Tube for DNA and RNA extraction respectively.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The female killer whale, ‘Morgan’, stranded on the coast of the Netherlands and was then transferred to the Harderwijk Dolfinarium. A comparison of Morgan’s mitochondrial DNA sequence and learned vocal repertoire with a North Atlantic database indicated that she originated from the population of killer whales that forages primarily on the Norwegian spring-spawning stock of Atlantic herring Clupea harengus 21 . A 10 ml sample of whole blood was taken and immediately stored in a PAXgene Blood DNA Tube and PAXgene Blood RNA Tube for DNA and RNA extraction respectively.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Concurrent with the theoretical reemphasis of individual differences (Bolnick et al ., 2003), Kareiva (2001) highlighted the necessity of conserving individuals one by one for any species which had declined to the point where such action could save a population. Even a single male can contribute to population success, by way of male-mediated gene flow among killer whale lineages when and where overlap occurs (Foote et al ., 2014). Systemic over-fishing of potential prey, especially Atlantic herring (Melville, 2018; Archibald et al ., 2020; NEFMC, 2020; EAC, 2023) constitutes an immediate threat to many piscivorous species at both system and smaller spatial scales (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cetacean researchers continue to value opportunistic or incidental data in documenting occurrences, given the paucity of information about many species and the impediments to undertaking designed quantitative surveys (e.g. Santillan, 2011; Foote et al ., 2014; Reinhart et al ., 2014; Accardo et al ., 2018; Gibson et al ., 2020). Incidental sightings vary from point-location ‘first records’ of a single animal (e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Killer whales in the Northeast Pacific have been studied for decades, and vocal repertoires have been described for most resident and transient ecotypes (Ford, 1984;Sharpe et al, 2019;Madrigal et al, 2021;Selbmann et al, 2021). Vocal repertoires of Northeast Atlantic killer whales have only been described more recently (Deecke et al, 2011;Foote et al, 2014;Selbmann et al, 2021). For example, Norwegian killer whale pulsed calls exhibit strong harmonic banding, with fundamental frequencies that range between 0.04 and 4.8 kHz with durations between 0.11 and 2.2 s (Strager, 1995).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%