Dear Marmam Readers,

I am very pleased to announce the following publication:

Monteiro, S. S., Torres-Pereira, A., Ferreira, M., Vingada, J. V., Nicolau,
L., Sequeira, M., López, A., Covelo, P., Azevedo, M. I., Hernandez-Milian,
G., Pierce, G. J., Eira, C. (2025). What’s on the menu? Diet of common
minke whales (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) stranded on the Atlantic Iberian
coast. *Marine Environmental Research*, 107024.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2025.107024

Abstract

There is little information regarding the ecology of common minke
whales (*Balaenoptera
acutorostrata*) in southern waters of the Northeast Atlantic. As such,
stomach contents from common minke whales stranded in the west Iberian
Peninsula were analyzed (n=27, 2005-2024) to improve the knowledge about
the foraging ecology of this species. Overall, small pelagic fish
species (*Sardina
pilchardus*, *Trachurus* sp., *Scomber* sp.), that are also targeted by
fisheries in this region, were predominant in the diet of common minke
whales. In particular, *Sardina pilchardus* and *Trachurus* sp. were
predominant in Portugal (n= 20; %N: 39.4 and 18.2; %W: 32.9 and 27.9; %IRI:
52.2 and 22.2 respectively), while *Scomber* sp. prevailed in Northwest
Spain (Galicia) (n=7; %N: 28.7; %W: 53.1; %IRI: 48.8), closely
followed by *Sardina
pilchardus* (%N: 40.9; %W: 34.6; %IRI: 45). Despite the similarity in the
predominant species (Alosidae and Scombridae families) between sexes,
females showed a less diverse diet compared to males. Results suggest a
temporal shift in the diet of common minke whales in the west Iberian
Peninsula (2005-2015 vs. 2016-2024), possibly related with changes in
sardine abundance in this region, resulting from prolonged poor recruitment
over several years associated with fishing mortality above sustainable
levels. In addition, the estimated length of the main prey ingested by
common minke whales was within the legal landing size allowed for fisheries
in the west Iberian Peninsula. Finally, both minke whales and fisheries
target the same energy-rich species, required to meet the high metabolic
cost of living of minke whales. As such, the results of this study suggest
the potential for minke whale-fisheries resource competition (in terms of
species, size class and quality), stressing the potential indirect or
direct threat that this socioeconomic activity may represent for common
minke whales. This information may be relevant for the definition of
efficient conservation strategies for this Vulnerable population. This
study presents the first description of the diet composition of common
minke whales in the southern part of their distribution range, in the North
Atlantic.


For an early view of this paper, please visit:

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0141113625000819


If you are unable to download the article, please contact me by email and I
will be
happy to send you a copy: s.monte...@ua.pt


Best wishes,

Silvia Monteiro
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