Diverse habitats shape the movement ecology of a top marine predator, the white shark Carcharodon carcharias

Author:

Jewell Oliver J. D.123ORCID,Chapple Taylor K.45ORCID,Jorgensen Salvador J.36ORCID,Kanive Paul37,Moxley Jerry H.38ORCID,Tweedley James R.19ORCID,Anderson Scot3,Block Barbara A.4,Gleiss Adrian C.19ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Sustainable Aquatic Ecosystems, Harry Butler Institute and Environmental and Conservation Sciences Murdoch University Perth Western Australia Australia

2. School of Biological Sciences and Oceans Institute University of Western Australia Perth Western Australia Australia

3. Monterey Bay Aquarium Monterey California USA

4. Hopkins Marine Station Stanford University Pacific Grove California USA

5. Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment Station Oregon State University Newport Oregon USA

6. California State University, Monterey Bay Marina California USA

7. Department of Ecology Montana State University Bozeman Montana USA

8. Department of Biological Sciences Institute of Environment, Florida International University North Miami Florida USA

9. School of Environmental and Conservation Sciences College of Science, Health, Engineering and Education, Murdoch University Western Australia Australia

Abstract

AbstractAn animal's movement is influenced by a plethora of internal and external factors, leading to individual‐ and habitat‐specific movement characteristics. This plasticity is thought to allow individuals to exploit diverse environments efficiently. We tested whether the movement characteristics of white sharks Carcharodon carcharias differ across ontogeny and among habitats along the coast of Central California. In doing so, we elucidate how changes in internal state (physiological changes coinciding with body size) and external environments (differing seascapes and/or diel phases) shape the movement of this globally distributed predator. Twenty‐one white sharks, from small juveniles to large adults, were equipped with motion‐sensitive biologging tags at four contrasting seascapes: two islands, a headland, and an inshore cove. From multisensor biologging data, 20 metrics characterizing movement (i.e., depth use, vertical velocities, activity, turning rates, and bursting events) were derived and subjected to multivariate analyses. Movement characteristics were most different across seascapes, followed by ontogeny and diel phase. Juvenile sharks, which were only encountered at the cove, displayed the most distinct movement characteristics. Sharks at this seascape remained close to the shore traveling over smaller areas, shallower depth ranges, and with lower levels of tail beat frequencies, when corrected for size, than sub‐adult and adult sharks tagged elsewhere. Distinct tortuous daytime versus linear nighttime horizontal movements were recorded from sharks at island seascapes but not from those at the headland or inshore cove. At the offshore islands, the linear nighttime swimming patterns coincided with repeated dives to and from deeper water. The availability of prey and access to deeper water are likely drivers of the differences in movement characteristics described, with varying demographics of pinniped prey found at the subadult and adult aggregation areas and juvenile sharks being piscivorous and their habitat neither adjacent to pinniped haul out areas nor deeper water. This study demonstrates plasticity in the movements of a top predator, which adapts its routine to suit the habitat it forages within.

Funder

National Park Service

Murdoch University

California Department of Fish and Wildlife

Monterey Bay Aquarium Foundation

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Stanford University

National Marine Fisheries Service

Publisher

Wiley

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