Bizzarro Joseph J, Broms Kristin M, Logsdon Miles G, Ebert David A, Yoklavich Mary M, Kuhnz Linda A, Summers Adam P
School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Unit, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Oct 20;9(10):e109907. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109907. eCollection 2014.
Skates (Rajiformes: Rajoidei) are common mesopredators in marine benthic communities. The spatial associations of individual species and the structure of assemblages are of considerable importance for effective monitoring and management of exploited skate populations. This study investigated the spatial associations of eastern North Pacific (ENP) skates in continental shelf and upper continental slope waters of two regions: central California and the western Gulf of Alaska. Long-term survey data were analyzed using GIS/spatial analysis techniques and regression models to determine distribution (by depth, temperature, and latitude/longitude) and relative abundance of the dominant species in each region. Submersible video data were incorporated for California to facilitate habitat association analysis. We addressed three main questions: 1) Are there regions of differential importance to skates?, 2) Are ENP skate assemblages spatially segregated?, and 3) When skates co-occur, do they differ in size? Skate populations were highly clustered in both regions, on scales of 10s of kilometers; however, high-density regions (i.e., hot spots) were segregated among species. Skate densities and frequencies of occurrence were substantially lower in Alaska as compared to California. Although skates are generally found on soft sediment habitats, Raja rhina exhibited the strongest association with mixed substrates, and R. stellulata catches were greatest on rocky reefs. Size segregation was evident in regions where species overlapped substantially in geographic and depth distribution (e.g., R. rhina and Bathyraja kincaidii off California; B. aleutica and B. interrupta in the Gulf of Alaska). Spatial niche differentiation in skates appears to be more pronounced than previously reported.
鳐(鳐形目:鳐亚目)是海洋底栖生物群落中常见的中型食肉动物。单个物种的空间关联以及群落结构对于有效监测和管理被捕捞的鳐种群至关重要。本研究调查了北太平洋东部(ENP)鳐在两个区域的大陆架和上大陆坡水域中的空间关联:加利福尼亚中部和阿拉斯加湾西部。使用地理信息系统/空间分析技术和回归模型分析长期调查数据,以确定每个区域优势物种的分布(按深度、温度和纬度/经度)和相对丰度。纳入了加利福尼亚的潜水器视频数据以促进栖息地关联分析。我们解决了三个主要问题:1)是否存在对鳐具有不同重要性的区域?2)ENP鳐群落是否在空间上隔离?3)当鳐同时出现时,它们在大小上是否存在差异?两个区域的鳐种群在数十公里的尺度上高度聚集;然而,高密度区域(即热点)在物种之间是隔离的。与加利福尼亚相比,阿拉斯加的鳐密度和出现频率要低得多。尽管鳐通常出现在软沉积物栖息地,但太平洋扁鳐与混合基质的关联最强,而星斑鳐在岩礁上的捕获量最大。在地理和深度分布上物种大量重叠的区域(例如加利福尼亚近海的太平洋扁鳐和金氏深海鳐;阿拉斯加湾的阿留申深海鳐和中断深海鳐),大小隔离很明显。鳐的空间生态位分化似乎比之前报道的更为明显。