“…Nevertheless, many tropical seabird species rely on similar prey items, use other birds as information cues to detect prey, and forage in mixed‐species flocks (Ashmole, 1971 ; Ballance et al., 1997 ; Spear et al., 2007 ; Thiebault et al., 2014 ; Veit & Harrison, 2017 ), leading to questions about the degree to which tropical seabird species are able to coexist and practice niche partitioning. Little evidence for trophic segregation has been found for some species of fish (Teffer et al., 2015 ), sharks (Lear et al., 2021 ), cetaceans (Peters et al., 2022 ), and seabirds (Forero et al., 2004 ; Petalas et al., 2024 ; Weimerskirch et al., 2009 ), and this was attributed to food being sufficiently abundant to allow species to coexist, at least during specific periods of the year.…”