Howey Lucy A, Wetherbee Bradley M, Tolentino Emily R, Shivji Mahmood S
Save Our Seas Shark Research Center and Guy Harvey Research Institute, Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA.
Microwave Telemetry, Inc., 8835 Columbia 100 Parkway, Suites K & L, Columbia, MD USA.
Mov Ecol. 2017 Jul 18;5:16. doi: 10.1186/s40462-017-0107-z. eCollection 2017.
Blue sharks () are among the most abundant and widely distributed of oceanic elasmobranchs. Millions are taken annually in pelagic longline fisheries and comprise the highest component of auctioned fin weight in the international shark fin trade. Though studies of blue sharks outnumber those of other large pelagic sharks, the species' complicated and sexually segregated life history still confound current understanding of Atlantic movement patterns. Lack of detailed information regarding movement and vertical behavior continues to limit management efforts that require such data for stock assessment and sustainable catch modeling. Therefore, this study aims to describe behavioral and ecological patterns distinct to aggregating and migrating blue sharks, and compare the findings to existing Atlantic movement models.
Data collected from 23 blue sharks instrumented with pop-up satellite archival tags were used in statistical predictive regression models to investigate habitat use during a localized aggregation in the northwest Atlantic, while undergoing seasonal migrations, and with respect to environmental variables. Deployment durations ranged from 4 to 273 days, with sharks inhabiting both productive coastal waters and the open ocean, and exhibiting long-distance seasonal movements exceeding 3700 km. While aggregating on the continental shelf of the northwest Atlantic, blue sharks displayed consistent depth use independent of sex and life stage, and exhibited varied response to environmental (temperature and chlorophyll ) factors. As sharks dispersed from the aggregation site, depth use was influenced by bathymetry, latitude, demography, and presence in the Gulf Stream. Mature females were not observed at the New England tagging site, however, two mature females with recent mating wounds were captured and tagged opportunistically in The Bahamas, one of which migrated to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.
Vertical behaviors displayed by blue sharks varied greatly among locales; depth use off the continental shelf was significantly greater, and individuals exhibited a greater frequency of deep-diving behavior, compared to periods of aggregation on the continental shelf. Sexual segregation was evident, suggesting mature and immature males, and immature females may be subjected to high levels of anthropogenic exploitation in this region during periods of aggregation. Analysis of the spatio-temporal tracks revealed that nine individuals traveled beyond the United States EEZ, including a mature female captured in The Bahamas that migrated to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. These results reflect and augment existing Atlantic migration models, and highlight the complex, synergistic nature of factors affecting blue shark ecology and the need for a cooperative management approach in the North Atlantic.
蓝鲨()是海洋中最丰富且分布最广的板鳃亚纲鱼类之一。每年在远洋延绳钓渔业中被捕捞的蓝鲨达数百万条,并且在国际鱼翅贸易中,蓝鲨鱼翅的拍卖重量占比最高。尽管对蓝鲨的研究数量超过了其他大型远洋鲨鱼,但该物种复杂且性别隔离的生活史仍使人们目前对其在大西洋的洄游模式的理解存在困惑。缺乏关于其洄游和垂直行为的详细信息,仍然限制了那些需要此类数据进行种群评估和可持续捕捞建模的管理工作。因此,本研究旨在描述聚集和洄游的蓝鲨所特有的行为和生态模式,并将研究结果与现有的大西洋洄游模型进行比较。
从23条装有弹出式卫星档案标签的蓝鲨收集的数据被用于统计预测回归模型,以研究西北大西洋局部聚集期间、季节性洄游期间以及与环境变量相关的栖息地利用情况。标签部署持续时间从4天到273天不等,蓝鲨栖息于高产的沿海水域和开阔海洋,并表现出超过3700公里的长距离季节性洄游。在西北大西洋大陆架聚集时,蓝鲨展示出与性别和生活阶段无关的一致深度利用情况,并且对环境(温度和叶绿素)因素表现出不同的反应。当鲨鱼从聚集地点分散时,深度利用受到地形、纬度、种群统计学以及在湾流中的存在情况的影响。在新英格兰标记地点未观察到成熟雌性蓝鲨,然而,在巴哈马群岛偶然捕获并标记了两条有近期交配伤痕的成熟雌性蓝鲨,其中一条洄游到了大西洋中脊。
蓝鲨在不同地点展示出的垂直行为差异很大;与在大陆架聚集期间相比,在大陆架外的深度利用显著更大,并且个体表现出更高频率的深潜行为。性别隔离很明显,这表明成熟和未成熟的雄性以及未成熟的雌性在聚集期间可能在该地区受到高水平的人为捕捞。对时空轨迹的分析表明,有9条个体游出了美国专属经济区范围,包括在巴哈马群岛捕获的一条洄游到了大西洋中脊的成熟雌性蓝鲨。这些结果反映并扩充了现有的大西洋洄游模型,并突出了影响蓝鲨生态的因素的复杂协同性质以及在北大西洋采取合作管理方法的必要性。