4.4 Article

Delineation of blacktip shark (Carcharhinus limbatus) nursery habitats in the north-western Gulf of Mexico

Journal

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY
Volume 101, Issue 1, Pages 236-248

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jfb.15103

Keywords

Gulf of Mexico; habitat use; neonate; parturition; shark nursery; Texas; trade-off

Funding

  1. Texas Parks and Wildlife Department

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The coevolution between predators and prey has led to prey species using low-risk habitats for survival during early development. However, the physical and geographical characteristics of these habitats can also limit scientific research. This study identified and analyzed the characteristics of blacktip shark nurseries in the north-western Gulf of Mexico using gillnet monitoring.
Coevolution with predators leads to the use of low-risk habitats by many prey species, which promotes survival during early developmental phases. These nurseries are valued by conservation and management agencies because of their contributions to adult populations. However, the physical and geographic characteristics, like shallow depths and isolation from other marine habitats, that restrict access to predators and thereby reduce risk to juvenile animals can also limit scientific research. Consequently, many nursery habitats are still unidentified and understudied. Here we used gillnet monitoring from 1982 to 2018 to delineate blacktip shark (Carcharhinus limbatus) nurseries in the north-western Gulf of Mexico and elucidated their physical, environmental and biological characteristics. Nursery habitats within estuaries (<2% of spatial area) were proximate to the Gulf of Mexico and exhibited significantly lower variability in salinity than non-nurseries. However, relative abundances of predators and prey were not significant delineators of nursery habitats. As such, food and risk may not influence juvenile blacktip habitat use as expected. Alternatively, reduced osmoregulatory stress attributed to predictable environments likely provides advantageous conditions for blacktips to develop foraging and antipredator tactics, which is vital prior to the winter migration of juvenile sharks into the Gulf of Mexico.

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