Semantic Scholar Open Access 2022 18 sitasi

Urban sharks: residency patterns of marine top predators in relation to a coastal metropolis

N. Hammerschlag Lfg Gutowsky MJ Rider R. Roemer A. Gallagher

Abstrak

Understanding and ultimately predicting how marine organisms will respond to urbanization is central for effective wildlife conservation and management in the Anthropocene. Sharks are upper trophic level predators in virtually all marine environments, but if and how their behaviors are influenced by coastal urbanization remains understudied. Here, we examined space use and residency patterns of 14 great hammerheads Sphyrna mokarran, 13 bull sharks Carcharhinus leucas, and 25 nurse sharks Ginglymostoma cirratum in proximity to the coastal metropolis of Miami, Florida, using passive acoustic telemetry. Based on the terrestrial urban carnivore literature, we predicted sharks would exhibit avoidance behaviors of areas close to Miami, with residency patterns in these urban areas increasing during periods of lower human activity, such as during nocturnal hours and weekdays, and that dietary specialists (great hammerhead) would exhibit comparatively lower affinity towards highly urbanized areas relative to dietary generalists (bull and nurse shark). However, we did not find empirical support for these predictions. Space use patterns of tracked sharks were consistent with that of ‘urban adapters’ (species that exhibit partial use of urban areas). Modeling also revealed that an unmeasured spatial variable was driving considerable shark residency in areas exposed to high urbanization. We propose several hypotheses that could explain our findings, including food provisioning from shore-based activities that could be attracting sharks to urban areas. Ultimately, the lack of avoidance of urban areas by sharks documented here, as compared to terrestrial carnivores, should motivate future research in the growing field of urban ecology. OPEN ACCESS Researchers release an acoustically tagged nurse shark into waters off Miami, Florida, to investigate shark residency patterns in relation to coastal urbanization. Photo: R. Roemer

Penulis (5)

N

N. Hammerschlag

L

Lfg Gutowsky

M

MJ Rider

R

R. Roemer

A

A. Gallagher

Format Sitasi

Hammerschlag, N., Gutowsky, L., Rider, M., Roemer, R., Gallagher, A. (2022). Urban sharks: residency patterns of marine top predators in relation to a coastal metropolis. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps14086

Akses Cepat

Lihat di Sumber doi.org/10.3354/meps14086
Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2022
Bahasa
en
Total Sitasi
18×
Sumber Database
Semantic Scholar
DOI
10.3354/meps14086
Akses
Open Access ✓