The Sibley Guide to Bird Life and Behavior - References |
|
SHEARWATERS AND PETRELS Family Procellariidae Chapter authors: Edward S. Brinkley and Alec Humann Bretagnolle, V. 1993. Adaptive significance of seabird coloration: the case of procellariiforms. American Naturalist 142:141-173. Bourne, W. R. P. 1983. The Soft-plumaged Petrel, the Gon-gon and the Freira, Pterodroma mollis, P. feae, and P. madeira. Bulletin of the British Ornithologist Club 103:52-58. Carboneras, C. 1992. Family Procellariidae (petrels and shearwaters). Pages 216-257 in Handbook of the birds of the world. Vol. 1. Ostrich to ducks (J. del Hoyo, A. Elliott, and J. Sargatal, Eds.). Lynx Edicions, Barcelona. Nevitt, G., R. R. Veit, and P. Kareiva. 1995. Dimethyl sulphide as a foraging cue for Antarctic procellariiform seabirds. Nature 376:680-682. Nevitt, G. 1999. Foraging by seabirds on an olfactory landscape. American Scientist 87:46-53. Pennycuick, C. J. 1987. Flight of seabirds. Pages 43-62 in Seabirds: feeding ecology and role in marine ecosystems (J. P. Croxall, Ed.). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Veit, R. R., J. A. McGowan, D. G. Ainley, T. R. Wahls, and P. Pyle. 1997. Apex marine predator declines ninety percent in association with changing oceanic climate. Global Change Biology 3:23-28. Waldvogel, J. A. 1989. Olfactory orientation by birds. Current Ornithology 6:269-321. Warham, J. 1990. The petrels: their ecology and breeding systems. Academic Press, San Diego, CA. Warham, J. 1996.
The behaviour, population biology and physiology of the petrels. Academic
Press, San Diego, CA.
|