Clive R. McMahon mainly investigates Ecology, Southern elephant seal, Predation, Oceanography and Foraging. In his research, Bay is intimately related to Fishery, which falls under the overarching field of Ecology. In Predation, Clive R. McMahon works on issues like Population size, which are connected to Disturbance, Predator and Population growth.
His Elephant seal study combines topics in areas such as Population decline, Mirounga angustirostris, Intraspecific competition and Mark and recapture. His Range study integrates concerns from other disciplines, such as Environmental change, Competition and Interspecific competition. His work on Marine protected area as part of his general Habitat study is frequently connected to Globe, thereby bridging the divide between different branches of science.
Clive R. McMahon spends much of his time researching Ecology, Foraging, Southern elephant seal, Oceanography and Habitat. His Ecology research incorporates themes from Population growth and Fishery. Reproductive success and Zoology is closely connected to Weaning in his research, which is encompassed under the umbrella topic of Foraging.
The various areas that Clive R. McMahon examines in his Habitat study include Population size and Ecosystem. His research investigates the connection between Climate change and topics such as Range that intersect with problems in Interspecific competition. His Predation research integrates issues from Intraspecific competition and Competition.
Foraging, Ecology, Habitat, Predation and Continental shelf are his primary areas of study. A majority of his Foraging research is a blend of other scientific areas, such as Southern elephant seal and δ13C. His research in the fields of Marine ecosystem, Trophic level and Temporal scales overlaps with other disciplines such as Context and Discoverability.
When carried out as part of a general Habitat research project, his work on Marine protected area is frequently linked to work in Globe, therefore connecting diverse disciplines of study. His work deals with themes such as Reproductive success and Life history theory, which intersect with Predation. Clive R. McMahon combines subjects such as Sampling, Ecosystem, Abiotic component and Arctocephalus forsteri with his study of Continental shelf.
Clive R. McMahon spends much of his time researching Climate change, Habitat, Ecology, Ecology and Ecosystem. His Climate change research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Marine ecosystem and Fishing. The Marine protected area research he does as part of his general Habitat study is frequently linked to other disciplines of science, such as Globe, therefore creating a link between diverse domains of science.
His research integrates issues of Range and Statistical power in his study of Ecology. His Ecosystem research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Continental shelf, Fishery, Ecological significance and Predation. His work often combines Pelagic zone and Southern elephant seal studies.
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Variability in sea ice cover and climate elicit sex specific responses in an Antarctic predator
Sara Labrousse;Jean-Baptiste Sallee;Jean-Baptiste Sallee;Alexander D. Fraser;Rob A. Massom.
Scientific Reports (2017)
Measuring devices on wild animals: what constitutes acceptable practice?
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Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (2006)
Thermal niche, large-scale movements and implications of climate change for a critically endangered marine vertebrate
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Global Change Biology (2006)
The 10 Australian ecosystems most vulnerable to tipping points
William F. Laurance;Bernard Dell;Stephen M. Turton;Michael J. Lawes.
(2011)
Southern Ocean frontal structure and sea-ice formation rates revealed by elephant seals
J.-B. Charrassin;M. Hindell;S. R. Rintoul;F. Roquet.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2008)
Weaning mass and the future survival of juvenile southern elephant seals, Mirounga leonina , at Macquarie Island
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Antarctic Science (2000)
Translating Marine Animal Tracking Data into Conservation Policy and Management
Graeme C. Hays;Helen Bailey;Steven J. Bograd;W. Don Bowen.
Trends in Ecology and Evolution (2019)
Using short-term measures of behaviour to estimate long-term fitness of southern elephant seals
Leslie F. New;James S. Clark;Daniel P. Costa;E. Fleishman;E. Fleishman.
Marine Ecology Progress Series (2014)
All at sea with animal tracks; methodological and analytical solutions for the resolution of movement
Rory P. Wilson;Nikolai Liebsch;Ian M. Davies;Flavio Quintana.
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography (2007)
Population status, trends and a re-examination of the hypotheses explaining the recent declines of the southern elephant seal Mirounga leonina
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Mammal Review (2005)
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