Sharks as exfoliators: widespread chafing between marine organisms suggests an unexplored ecological role
收藏DataCite Commons2021-08-17 更新2024-07-13 收录
下载链接:
https://scholarship.miami.edu/permalink/01UOML_INST/105q9vf/alma991031605661602976
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
This dataset is associated to the article “Sharks as exfoliators: widespread chafing between marine organisms suggests and unexplored ecological role” by Williams et al. (2021), published in Ecology's The Scientific Naturalist. Specifically, these are the video and jpeg files used to generate Table 1 in the Appendix and Figures 1 and 3 as well as the metadata master table which includes all documented chafing incidents and the file names for the associated video or photograph. These data are the results of collating 47 video, photographic and anecdotal observations from thirteen different locations across the world's oceans. This appears to be the only phenomenon whereby a prey actively seeks out and rubs up against a predator.
Of the 47 recorded incidents, 25 were recorded using a drone; six incidents were recorded subsurface by divers; five were documented photographically; the rest were anecdotal observations. Given the logistical difficulties in observing sharks in the wild, the prevalence of reports of chafing involving multiple species in multiple locations around the world raises several ecological questions. We hypothesize several ecological implications and suggest future research to better understand this phenomenon.
提供机构:
University of Miami Libraries
创建时间:
2021-07-19



