Environmental cycles and individual variation in the vertical movements of a benthic elasmobranch

Author:

Lavender EdwardORCID,Aleynik Dmitry,Dodd Jane,Illian Janine,James Mark,Wright Peter J.,Smout Sophie,Thorburn James

Abstract

AbstractTrends in depth and vertical activity reflect the behaviour, habitat use and habitat preferences of marine organisms. However, among elasmobranchs, research has focused heavily on pelagic sharks, while the vertical movements of benthic elasmobranchs, such as skate (Rajidae), remain understudied. In this study, the vertical movements of the Critically Endangered flapper skate (Dipturus intermedius) were investigated using archival depth data collected at 2 min intervals from 21 individuals off the west coast of Scotland (56.5°N, −5.5°W) in 2016–17. Depth records comprised nearly four million observations and included eight time series longer than 1 year, forming one of the most comprehensive datasets collected on the movement of any skate to date. Additive modelling and functional data analysis were used to investigate vertical movements in relation to environmental cycles and individual characteristics. Vertical movements were dominated by individual variation but included prolonged periods of limited activity and more extensive movements that were associated with tidal, diel, lunar and seasonal cycles. Diel patterns were strongest, with irregular but frequent movements into shallower water at night, especially in autumn and winter. This research strengthens the evidence for vertical movements in relation to environmental cycles in benthic species and demonstrates a widely applicable flexible regression framework for movement research that recognises the importance of both individual-specific and group-level variation.

Funder

NatureScot

Marine Scotland

Marine Alliance for Science and Technology for Scotland

Centre for Research into Ecological and Environmental Modelling

Shark Guardian

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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