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Foraging on anthropogenic food predicts problem-solving skills in a seabird
Why is this work in the frame?
A frame that forgets how it found something cannot be audited. These are the routes that admitted this work.
Canadian affiliationAn author listed a Canadian institution. This is the only route the usual frame has.
Canadian funderA Canadian agency funded it. The work may carry no Canadian affiliation at all.
The three-model screen
all 1,000 screened works →All three models called this out of scope.
stratum: aff_core · design weight: 5595.24 (the sample is stratified; any rate computed without the weight is wrong)
Claude Opus 4.8OUT
genre: empirical
about Canada: no
confidence: high
Behavioural ecology study linking anthropogenic foraging to problem solving in seabirds.
GPT-5.6 (high)OUT
genre: empirical
about Canada: no
confidence: high
This ecological study examines seabird foraging and problem-solving, not research.
Grok 4.5OUT
genre: empirical
about Canada: no
confidence: high
Seabird behavioural ecology; title unambiguous domain science despite missing abstract.
Abstract
No abstract. This is not a gap in this database — OpenAlex has none either. 23.3% of the frame is in this state, and the screen finds HALF as much metaresearch here, so the absence is a measured bias rather than a missing field.
The record
- Venue
- The Science of The Total Environment
- Topic
- Isotope Analysis in Ecology
- Field
- Environmental Science
- Canadian institutions
- Environment and Climate Change CanadaMemorial University of Newfoundland
- Funders
- Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of CanadaEnvironment and Climate Change Canada
- Keywords
- ForagingSeabirdEicosapentaenoic acidHabitatUrbanizationEcologyDocosahexaenoic acidNutrientBiologyZoologyFatty acidPolyunsaturated fatty acidBiochemistry
- Has abstract in OpenAlex
- no