Exploitation shifted trophic ecology and habitat preferences of Mediterranean and Black Sea bluefin tuna over centuries

Author:

Andrews Adam J.12ORCID,Pampoulie Christophe3,Di Natale Antonio4,Addis Piero5,Bernal‐Casasola Darío6,Aniceti Veronica7,Carenti Gabriele8,Gómez‐Fernández Verónica9,Chosson Valerie3,Ughi Alice10,Von Tersch Matt10,Fontanals‐Coll Maria10,Cilli Elisabetta2,Onar Vedat11,Tinti Fausto1ORCID,Alexander Michelle10ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological, Geological and Environmental Sciences University of Bologna Ravenna Italy

2. Department of Cultural Heritage University of Bologna Ravenna Italy

3. Marine and Freshwater Research Institute Hafnarfjörður Iceland

4. Aquastudio Research Institute Messina Italy

5. Department of Life and Environmental Sciences University of Cagliari Cagliari Italy

6. Department of History, Geography and Philosophy, Faculty of Philosophy and Letters University of Cádiz Cádiz Spain

7. Department of Natural History – University Museum University of Bergen Bergen Norway

8. CEPAM, CNRS Université Côte d'Azur Nice France

9. Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Ecológicas Salamanca Spain

10. BioArCh, Department of Archaeology University of York York UK

11. Osteoarchaeology Practice and Research Centre, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Istanbul University‐Cerrahpaşa Istanbul Turkey

Abstract

AbstractDuring recent decades, the health of ocean ecosystems and fish populations has been threatened by overexploitation, pollution and anthropogenic‐driven climate change. Due to a lack of long‐term ecological data, we have a poor grasp of the true impact on the diet and habitat use of fishes. This information is vital if we are to recover depleted fish populations and predict their future dynamics. Here, we trace the long‐term diet and habitat use of Atlantic bluefin tuna (BFT), Thunnus thynnus, a species that has had one of the longest and most intense exploitation histories, owing to its tremendous cultural and economic importance. Using carbon, nitrogen and sulphur stable isotope analyses of modern and ancient BFT including 98 archaeological and archival bones from 11 Mediterranean locations ca. 1st century to 1941 CE, we infer a shift to increased pelagic foraging around the 16th century in Mediterranean BFT. This likely reflects the early anthropogenic exploitation of inshore coastal ecosystems, as attested by historical literature sources. Further, we reveal that BFT which migrated to the Black Sea–and that disappeared during a period of intense exploitation and ecosystem changes in the 1980s–represented a unique component, isotopically distinct from BFT of NE Atlantic and Mediterranean locations. These data suggest that anthropogenic activities had the ability to alter the diet and habitat use of fishes in conditions prior to those of recent decades. Consequently, long‐term data provide novel perspectives on when marine ecosystem modification began and the responses of marine populations, with which to guide conservation policy.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

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