4.8 Article

Ocean warming alters the distributional range, migratory timing, and spatial protections of an apex predator, the tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier)

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 28, 期 6, 页码 1990-2005

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16045

关键词

climate change; conservation; ecosystem impacts; fisheries; global change; predators; range shifts; sharks

资金

  1. Batchelor Foundation
  2. Disney Worldwide Conservation Fund
  3. Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation
  4. Herbert W. Hoover Foundation
  5. International Seakeepers Society
  6. West Coast Inland Navigation District
  7. Hoff Productions
  8. Wells Fargo

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study evaluated the effects of climate variability and change on the distribution and migratory phenology of the tiger shark. The results showed that the migrations of tiger sharks have extended farther poleward and occurred earlier in the year during periods with anomalously high sea-surface temperatures. Additionally, long-term ocean warming also led to changes in the distribution and timing of shark captures. These findings have implications for fisheries management, human-wildlife conflict, and ecosystem functioning.
Given climate change threats to ecosystems, it is critical to understand the responses of species to warming. This is especially important in the case of apex predators since they exhibit relatively high extinction risk, and changes to their distribution could impact predator-prey interactions that can initiate trophic cascades. Here we used a combined analysis of animal tracking, remotely sensed environmental data, habitat modeling, and capture data to evaluate the effects of climate variability and change on the distributional range and migratory phenology of an ectothermic apex predator, the tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Tiger sharks satellite tracked in the western North Atlantic between 2010 and 2019 revealed significant annual variability in the geographic extent and timing of their migrations to northern latitudes from ocean warming. Specifically, tiger shark migrations have extended farther poleward and arrival times to northern latitudes have occurred earlier in the year during periods with anomalously high sea-surface temperatures. A complementary analysis of nearly 40 years of tiger shark captures in the region revealed decadal-scale changes in the distribution and timing of shark captures in parallel with long-term ocean warming. Specifically, areas of highest catch densities have progressively increased poleward and catches have occurred earlier in the year off the North American shelf. During periods of anomalously high sea-surface temperatures, movements of tracked sharks shifted beyond spatial management zones that had been affording them protection from commercial fishing and bycatch. Taken together, these study results have implications for fisheries management, human-wildlife conflict, and ecosystem functioning.

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