Movement and vertical habitat use of yellowfin tuna Thunnus albacares in a vertically compressed habitat: the Galápagos Marine Reserve

Author:

Rohner Christoph A.1ORCID,Naveira Garabato Alberto C.2ORCID,Hearn Alex R.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Marine Megafauna Foundation West Palm Beach Florida USA

2. Ocean and Earth Science University of Southampton Southampton UK

3. Galápagos Science Center, Department of Biological Sciences Universidad San Francisco de Quito Quito Ecuador

Abstract

AbstractTropical pelagic predators are exploited by fisheries and their movements are influenced by factors including prey availability, temperature, and dissolved oxygen levels. As the biophysical parameters vary greatly within the range of circumtropical species, local studies are needed to define those species' habitat preference and model possible behavioral responses under different climate change scenarios. Here, we tagged yellowfin tuna Thunnus albacares in the Galápagos Marine Reserve and tracked the horizontal and vertical movements of eight individuals for 4–97 days. The tuna traveled a mean of 13.6 km day−1 horizontally and dispersed throughout the archipelago and in offshore waters inside the Galápagos Marine Reserve and in the surrounding Ecuadorian exclusive economic zone. Vertically, they traveled a mean of 2 km day−1, although high‐resolution data from a recovered tag suggested that transmitted data underestimated their vertical movement by a factor of 5.5. The tracked yellowfin tuna spent most of their time near the surface, with an overall mean swimming depth of 24.3 ± 46.6 m, and stayed shallower at night (11.1 ± 16.3 m) than during the day ( 37.7 ± 60.9 m), but on occasion dived to cold, oxygen‐poor waters below 200 m. Deep dives were commonly made during the day with a mean recovery period of 51 min between exposures to modeled oxygen‐limiting conditions <1.5 mL L−1, presumably to re‐oxygenate. The depth and frequency of dives were likely limited by dissolved oxygen levels, as oxygen‐depleted conditions reach shallow depths in this region. The main habitat of tracked yellowfin tunas was in the shallow mixed layer, which may leave them vulnerable to fishing. Vertical expansion of low‐oxygen waters under future climate change scenarios may further compress their habitat, increasing their vulnerability to surface fishing gear.

Funder

Galapagos Conservation Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference58 articles.

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2. Aires‐da‐Silva A. Maunder M. N. Xu H. Minte‐Vera C. Valero J. L. &Lennert‐Cody C. E.(2020).Risk analysis for management of the tropical tuna fishery in the eastern Pacific Ocean. IATTC document SAC‐11‐08 REV. 33p.

3. First Insights Into the Fine-Scale Movements of the Sandbar Shark, Carcharhinus plumbeus

4. Sharing the water column: physiological mechanisms underlying species-specific habitat use in tunas

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