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Carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen stable isotope ratios of striped dolphins and short-finned pilot whales stranded in Hokkaido, northern Japan, compared with those of other cetaceans stranded and hunted in Japan.

Strandings of striped dolphins (SD) and short-finned pilot whales (PW) in Hokkaido, northern Japan, are rare but have recently increased, probably due to global warming. We quantified δ 13 C, δ 15 N, and δ 18 O in muscles of SD ( n  = 7) and PW ( n  = 3) stranded in Hokkaido and compared these values with those in muscles (red meat products) of hunted SD and PW in three areas of central and southern Japan. δ 18 O in stranded SD, except for the calf, decreased with increasing body length (BL), whereas δ 13 C increased, with no BL-related changes in δ 15 N. The variability of δ 18 O (range of maximum and minimum) was larger in the stranded SD (7.5 ‰) than of the hunted SD in three areas (0.9, 1.9, and 1.4 ‰), whereas that of δ 15 N was smaller in the stranded SD than in the hunted SD. Similarly, the variability of δ 18 O was larger in the stranded PW in Hokkaido (3.3 ‰) than in the hunted PW in central Japan (1.4 ‰). The larger variability of δ 18 O and smaller variability of δ 15 N in stranded SD imply long-term sojourning in coastal waters and feeding on small amounts of limited prey species at low trophic levels before death.

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