6 research outputs found

    Convergence of marine megafauna movement patterns in coastal and open oceans

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    Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2017. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 115 (2018): 3072-3077, doi:10.1073/pnas.1716137115.The extent of increasing anthropogenic impacts on large marine vertebrates partly depends on the animals’ movement patterns. Effective conservation requires identification of the key drivers of movement including intrinsic properties and extrinsic constraints associated with the dynamic nature of the environments the animals inhabit. However, the relative importance of intrinsic versus extrinsic factors remains elusive. We analyse a global dataset of 2.8 million locations from > 2,600 tracked individuals across 50 marine vertebrates evolutionarily separated by millions of years and using different locomotion modes (fly, swim, walk/paddle). Strikingly, movement patterns show a remarkable convergence, being strongly conserved across species and independent of body length and mass, despite these traits ranging over 10 orders of magnitude among the species studied. This represents a fundamental difference between marine and terrestrial vertebrates not previously identified, likely linked to the reduced costs of locomotion in water. Movement patterns were primarily explained by the interaction between species-specific traits and the habitat(s) they move through, resulting in complex movement patterns when moving close to coasts compared to more predictable patterns when moving in open oceans. This distinct difference may be associated with greater complexity within coastal micro-habitats, highlighting a critical role of preferred habitat in shaping marine vertebrate global movements. Efforts to develop understanding of the characteristics of vertebrate movement should consider the habitat(s) through which they move to identify how movement patterns will alter with forecasted severe ocean changes, such as reduced Arctic sea ice cover, sea level rise and declining oxygen content.Workshops funding granted by the UWA Oceans Institute, AIMS, and KAUST. AMMS was supported by an ARC Grant DE170100841 and an IOMRC (UWA, AIMS, CSIRO) fellowship; JPR by MEDC (FPU program, Spain); DWS by UK NERC and Save Our Seas Foundation; NQ by FCT (Portugal); MMCM by a CAPES fellowship (Ministry of Education)

    The life history characters, reproductive constraints and foraging strategies of a neritic seabird, the crested tern.

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    This thesis examines the functional relationships between the diet, foraging behaviour and life history traits of crested tern populations in South Australia between 2004 and 2008. Diet analyses indicated that crested terns are a generalist predator on surface-schooling fishes. Clupeiform fish (Australian anchovy Engraulis australis, sardine Sardinops sagax) comprised a large component of the diet of crested terns. Ontogenetic differences in prey size indicated that adults selected small prey for their chicks during early provisioning but increased the size and rate of prey delivered throughout the breeding season as chicks grew. Adults also selected higher quality prey for their chicks compared to what they consumed themselves. Chick and adult diets may have reflected spatial differences in the species composition of prey assemblages near colonies and a North-South gradient in prey size. I also investigated the provisioning patterns of crested terns and how reproductive timing and adult body condition affect the growth and survival of crested tern chicks. Provisioning rates were related to the daily mass change of chicks, and chick growth was correlated with asymptotic mass, suggesting that prey availability and adult foraging proficiency influences fledgling size. Parental ‘quality’ affected reproductive performance. Adults with good body condition hatched chicks earlier and early breeding was positively related to hatchling mass, fledgling condition and chick survival. Adults aged <7 years had significantly poorer body condition and hatched their chicks later compared to adults ≄7 years. However, adult body condition also varied within cohorts, indicating that reproductive performance is affected by phenotypic differences in parental quality. Consequently, the growth of crested tern populations may be most sensitive to the foraging behaviour and reproductive output of high quality adults ≄7 years old. Disease-related mortality events in 1995 and 1998, which killed ~ 70% of adult sardine Sardinops sagax biomass, provided an opportunity to assess whether crested tern populations were affected by decreases in prey abundance. Age-specific information collected from adults indicated that chicks reared during poor prey conditions caused by the first sardine mortality event in 1995 exhibited lower rates of recruitment to the breeding colony. Females from cohorts reared 0.5mg.m⁻³). Intra-specific variations in foraging behaviour reflected either prior knowledge of where prey aggregations exist, distinctions in individual niche use driven by the types or sizes of prey available, and/or alternate behavioural states (self feeding and provisioning). The restricted foraging range of crested terns while breeding may make them sensitive to competition with fisheries that operate within their foraging range. Diet and demographic information collected from crested tern populations may provide ecological performance indicators to enhance conservation strategies for crested tern populations and augment current fisheries management approaches.Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, 201

    Spatial and temporal variations in female size at maturity of a Southern Rock Lobster (Jasus edwardsii) population: A likely response to climate change.

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    The size at which sexual maturity is reached is a key population parameter used to guide the setting of minimum legal size limits in fisheries. Understanding spatial and temporal variations in size at maturity is fundamental to management because the relationship between size at maturity and minimum legal size limits affects the fraction of the mature population biomass that is harvested, and resulting egg production, larval settlement and recruitment. This study measured the size at maturity of female Southern Rock Lobster (Jasus edwardsii) across South Australia between 1991 and 2015 in relation to known oceanographic characteristics, surface and subsurface temperature data, and relative changes in lobster abundance. There was pronounced north to south spatial variation in estimates of size at maturity. Larger average size at maturity was recorded in warmer north-western areas of the fishery relative to the cooler waters of the south-east. Estimates of size at maturity also differed over 25 years across the fishery. However, the nature of temporal responses varied spatially, and were more consistent with variations in surface and subsurface water temperature at local-scales than changes in lobster density. In the well-mixed waters of the north-western, western and south-eastern parts of the fishery, relatively high rates of increase in sea-surface temperature and size at maturity were recorded since 1991, indicating that size at maturity may be responding to ocean warming associated with global climate change. In more central parts of the fishery, contrasting temporal signals in sea-surface temperature (positive) and bottom temperature (negative) indicated increases in upwelling strength over the study period, and formation of a bottom cold pool below a warm surface layer, with corresponding decreases in size at maturity recorded. The spatio-temporal changes in size at maturity measured in this study highlight the need for oceanographic information to be integrated into future stock assessment models to enhance harvest strategy development, allow timely adaptive management decisions and increase the resilience of fisheries to the impacts of climate change

    Trophodynamics of the eastern Great Australian Bight ecosystem : ecological change associated with the growth of Australia\u27s largest fishery

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    We used the Ecopath with Ecosim software to develop a trophic mass-balance model of the eastern Great Australian Bight ecosystem, off southern Australia. Results provide an ecosystem perspective of Australia's largest fishery, the South Australian sardine fishery, by placing its establishment and growth in the context of other dynamic changes in the ecosystem, including: the development of other fisheries; changing abundances of apex predator populations and oceanographic change. We investigated the potential impacts of the sardine fishery on high tropic level predators, particularly land-breeding seals and seabirds which may be suitable ecological performance indicators of ecosystem health. Results indicate that despite the rapid growth of the sardine fishery since 1991, there has likely been a negligible fishery impact on other modelled groups, suggesting that current levels of fishing effort are not impacting negatively on the broader ecosystem structure and function in the eastern Great Australian Bight. Results highlight the importance of small pelagic fish to higher trophic levels, the trophic changes that have resulted from loss and recovery of apex predator populations, and the potential pivotal role of cephalopod biomass in regulating ‘bottom-up’ trophic processes. The ability to resolve and attribute potential impacts from multiple fisheries, other human impacts and ecological change in this poorly understood region is highlighted by the study, and will be critical to ensure future ecologically sustainable development within the region.Simon D. Goldsworthy, Brad Page, Paul J. Rogers, Cathy Bulman, Annelise Wiebkin, Lachlan J. McLeay, Luke Einoder, Alastair M.M. Baylis, Michelle Braley, Robin Caines, Keryn Daly, Charlie Huveneers, Kristian Peters, Andrew D. Lowther, Tim M. War
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