4.8 Article

Ocean-wide tracking of pelagic sharks reveals extent of overlap with longline fishing hotspots

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1510090113

Keywords

animal telemetry; distribution; conservation; fisheries; predator-prey

Funding

  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council Oceans Strategic Research Programme
  2. Save Our Seas Foundation
  3. Marine Biological Association Senior Research Fellowship
  4. European Regional Development Fund (FEDER) via the Programa Operacional Competitividade e Internacionalizacao (COMPETE)
  5. National Funds via Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT) [PTDC/MAR/100345/2008, COMPETE FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-010580]
  6. Project Biodiversity, Ecology and Global Change
  7. North Portugal Regional Operational Programme under the National Strategic Reference Framework via the European Regional Development Fund [ON.2-O Novo Norte]
  8. FCT [IF/01611/2013, IF/00043/2012, SFRH/BD/68717/2010, SFRH/BD/68521/2010]
  9. Disney Worldwide Conservation Fund
  10. Batchelor Foundation
  11. West Coast Inland Navigation District in Florida
  12. NERC [mba010004, pml010009] Funding Source: UKRI
  13. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [PTDC/MAR/100345/2008, SFRH/BD/68717/2010, SFRH/BD/68521/2010] Funding Source: FCT
  14. Natural Environment Research Council [mba010004, 1066095, pml010009] Funding Source: researchfish

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Overfishing is arguably the greatest ecological threat facing the oceans, yet catches of many highly migratory fishes including oceanic sharks remain largely unregulated with poor monitoring and data reporting. Oceanic shark conservation is hampered by basic knowledge gaps about where sharks aggregate across population ranges and precisely where they overlap with fishers. Using satellite tracking data from six shark species across the North Atlantic, we show that pelagic sharks occupy predictable habitat hotspots of high space use. Movement modeling showed sharks preferred habitats characterized by strong sea surface-temperature gradients (fronts) over other available habitats. However, simultaneous Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking of the entire Spanish and Portuguese longline-vessel fishing fleets show an 80% overlap of fished areas with hotspots, potentially increasing shark susceptibility to fishing exploitation. Regions of high overlap between oceanic tagged sharks and longliners included the North Atlantic Current/Labrador Current convergence zone and the Mid-Atlantic Ridge southwest of the Azores. In these main regions, and subareas within them, shark/vessel co-occurrence was spatially and temporally persistent between years, highlighting how broadly the fishing exploitation efficiently tracks oceanic sharks within their space-use hotspots year-round. Given this intense focus of longliners on shark hotspots, our study argues the need for international catch limits for pelagic sharks and identifies a future role of combining fine-scale fish and vessel telemetry to inform the ocean-scale management of fisheries.

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