Figure 7 in Whale killers: Prevalence and ecological implications of killer whale predation on humpback whale calves off Western Australia

Figure 7. The remains of a humpback whale juvenile (length estimate 8–9 m), <60 h after it was last seen intact (and probably still alive) at the surface; it was apparently killed and then eaten by sharks during 20–22 May 2014, off Coral Bay, WA. Photo: Migration Media. Published as part of Pitma...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pitman, Robert L., Totterdell, John A., Fearnbach, Holly, Ballance, Lisa T., Durban, John W., Kemps, Hans
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2014
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12761498
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Summary:Figure 7. The remains of a humpback whale juvenile (length estimate 8–9 m), <60 h after it was last seen intact (and probably still alive) at the surface; it was apparently killed and then eaten by sharks during 20–22 May 2014, off Coral Bay, WA. Photo: Migration Media. Published as part of Pitman, Robert L., Totterdell, John A., Fearnbach, Holly, Ballance, Lisa T., Durban, John W. & Kemps, Hans, 2015, Whale killers: Prevalence and ecological implications of killer whale predation on humpback whale calves off Western Australia, pp. 629-657 in Marine Mammal Science 31 (2) on page 647, DOI:10.1111/mms.12182, http://zenodo.org/record/12761484