Emma Vogel
Post-doctoral fellow
Job description
My research focuses on understanding how marine top-predators interact with their environment. I am particularly interested in how prey fields influence foraging behaviours. More specifically, I have been studying how various whale species (Killer whales, Humpback whales, and Sperm whales) interact with local fisheries. I study this using a range of techniques including bio-logging, stable isotope analysis, and quantitative modelling.
Emma Frances Vogel,
AH Rikardsen,
Marie-Anne Blanchet,
Pierre Blévin,
Martin Biuw
:
Norwegian killer whale movements reflect their different preytypes
Polar Research 2024 ARKIV
Emma Vogel,
Stine Skalmerud,
Martin Biuw,
Marie-Anne Blanchet,
Lars Kleivane,
Georg Skaret
et al.:
Foraging movements of humpback whales relate to the lateral and vertical distribution of capelin in the Barents Sea
Robert J. Lennox,
Pedro Afonso,
Kim Birnie-Gauvin,
Lotte Svengård Dahlmo,
Cecilie Iden Nilsen,
Robert Arlinghaus
et al.:
Electronic tagging and tracking aquatic animals to understand a world increasingly shaped by a changing climate and extreme weather events
Robert J. Lennox,
Lotte Svengård Dahlmo,
Adam T. Ford,
Lene Sortland,
Emma Vogel,
Knut Wiik Vollset
:
Predation research with electronic tagging
Pierre Bories,
Audun H. Rikardsen,
Pim Leonards,
Aaron T. Fisk,
Sabrina Tartu,
Emma Vogel
et al.:
A deep dive into fat: Investigating blubber lipidomic fingerprint of killer whales and humpback whales in northern Norway
Emma Vogel,
Martin Biuw,
Marie-Anne Blanchet,
Ian D. Jonsen,
Evert Mul,
Espen Johnsen
et al.:
Killer whale movements on the Norwegian shelf are associated with herring density
Marine Ecology Progress Series 2021 DOI
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