Ramos i Garcia, RaülCarlile, NicholasMadeiros, JeremyRamírez, IvánPaiva, Vitor H.Dinis, Herculano A.Zino, FrancisBiscoito, ManuelLeal, Gustavo R.Bugoni, LeandroJodice, Patrick G. R.Ryan, Peter G.González-Solís, Jacob2019-02-272019-02-272017-071366-9516https://hdl.handle.net/2445/129185Main conclusions: Tracking movements of highly mobile vertebrates such as gadfly petrels can provide a powerful tool to evaluate and assess the potential need for and location of protected oceanic areas. As more multispecies, year-round data sets are collected from wide-ranging vertebrates, researchers and managers will have greater insight into the location of biodiversity hotspots. These can subsequently inform and guide marine spatial planning efforts that account for both conservation and sustainable use of resources such as commercial fisheries.12 p.application/pdfeng(c) John Wiley & Sons, 2017Ocells marinsMigració d'ocellsPoblacions animalsAtlàntic, OceàSea birdsBirds migrationAnimal populationsAtlantic OceanIt is the time for oceanic seabirds: Tracking year-round distribution of gadfly petrels across the Atlantic Oceaninfo:eu-repo/semantics/article6741862019-02-27info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess