Quantifying impacts of seabird bycatch using genetic assignment: A case study of black-footed albatross in U.S. fisheries
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2025
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Details
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Journal Title:Biological Conservation
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Description:Migratory species encounter multiple threats as they move through and occupy distinct habitats (Bairlein, 2016). Assessing the severity of interacting threats complicates quantifying the cumulative impact, yet is critical for management and conservation (Mahon et al., 2019). Managing threats to migratory animals can become even more complex in species with metapopulation structure (Schnell et al., 2013) when discrete populations share similar environments during some parts of their lifecycle but not others (e.g., specific links between breeding and foraging areas). In these cases, holistic management requires understanding how individuals from discrete populations experience threats across habitats (Rushing et al., 2016).
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Source:Biological Conservation, 303, 110965
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DOI:
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ISSN:0006-3207
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Rights Information:CC BY-NC-ND
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Compliance:Submitted
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Main Document Checksum:urn:sha-512:8fd0fc53c0e6c690db4c766691a6345a97592c1b19c0cb02061e1aac0333326a22e6184a067d648c3a8f3d81054459e3739fa5d8bf835bb32ca2815fd8e4902e
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