Abstract

Young-of-the-year (YOY) and juvenile-stage white sharks may use southern California nearshore beach habitats more extensively than previously known, within meters of some of the most heavily used beaches in the world. Such knowledge forms a critical component of species management and conservation plans, in addition to public safety and risk mitigation planning. We used data derived from a combination of satellite tag locations (13 animals over 3 years) and passive acoustic monitoring (34 animals over 8 years) to examine the occurrence, relative abundance, and residency patterns of YOY white sharks in southern California waters. Our results suggest that southern California contains spatiotemporally dynamic centers of primary nursery habitat. Tagged YOY white sharks formed loose aggregations at “hotspot” locations that were interannually variable, where individuals exhibited temporal fidelity, higher levels of residency, and spatially restricted movements, with multiple YOY individuals simultaneously displaying this behavior. While models of biotic and abiotic variables suggested relative abundance of tagged sharks may be predicted by sea surface temperature, salinity and productivity (chlorophyll-A), these predictors were not consistent across all years of the study. Thus, novel approaches that incorporate technologies to derive high resolution environmental data, paired with more comprehensive telemetry datasets are therefore required to better understand the extrinsic factors that drive habitat selection and residency patterns in juvenile white sharks.

Highlights

  • Many coastal shark species are known to select nearshore habitats during early life stages with neonates and young-of-the-year (YOY) exhibiting reduced space use within these areas (Heupel et al, 2004, 2007; Hueter et al, 2005; Speed et al, 2010; Oh et al, 2017)

  • Smart Position Or Temperature Transmitter (SPOT) tag locations showed similar spatial distributions to that seen from the acoustic data, such as a high density of locations surrounding SMB and nearshore areas in southern California

  • This study presents the first quantification of interannual residency patterns of YOY white sharks from this Northeast Pacific population, in southern California waters

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Many coastal shark species are known to select nearshore habitats (e.g., bays, lagoons, and estuaries) during early life stages with neonates and young-of-the-year (YOY) exhibiting reduced space use within these areas (Heupel et al, 2004, 2007; Hueter et al, 2005; Speed et al, 2010; Oh et al, 2017). YOY White Shark Nursery Habitat may give birth elsewhere and YOY individuals find their way into these areas (Chapman et al, 2015) These protected, shallow, nearshore habitats are thought to offer protection from predation, enhanced prey availability, and typically warm temperatures to allow for faster growth and higher survivorship (Heupel et al, 2004; Hueter et al, 2005; Speed et al, 2012). While white sharks exhibit an offshore, oceanic phase as adults, YOY individuals [

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call