4.7 Article

Quantifying thermal cues that initiate mass emigrations in juvenile white sharks

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 12, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-24377-1

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  1. State of California Shark Beach Safety Program

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This study investigated the thermal threshold for mass emigration of juvenile white sharks using acoustic telemetry tracking and high-resolution water temperature data. The findings showed that most sharks started searching for warmer water when the sea temperature dropped below 14 degrees Celsius, leading to mass migration of the population.
While the function of migration varies among species, environmental temperature is known to be one of the most important abiotic variables that drive animal migration; however, quantifying the thresholds and timing of the cues that influence a mass emigration is difficult, often due to lack of monitoring resolution, particularly for large, highly mobile species. We used acoustic telemetry tracking and high-resolution water temperature data over a relatively large spatial scale (5.5 km(2)) to identify and quantify a thermal threshold for mass emigration of juvenile white sharks. Sixteen tagged sharks were observed to initiate a search for warmer water within 10-12 hours of an upwelling event where water temperatures dropped below 14 degrees C. Eleven sharks traveled similar to 35 km away where they experienced similar cold temperatures before returning to the aggregation site within 24 hours. Five days following the upwelling event, most sharks emigrated from the site for the season. Quantifying movement patterns across different spatial and temporal scales is necessary to understand cues and thresholds influencing animal migration, which may be greatly affected by climate anomalies and climate change, resulting in potential impacts on the dynamics of local prey species, management, and conservation policy and practice.

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