Ocean-scale prediction of whale shark distribution

Date

2012

Authors

Martins Sequeira, A.
Mellin, C.
Rowat, D.
Meekan, M.
Bradshaw, C.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Diversity and Distributions: a journal of conservation biogeography, 2012; 18(5):504-518

Statement of Responsibility

Ana Sequeira, Camille Mellin, David Rowat, Mark G. Meekan and Corey J. A. Bradshaw

Conference Name

Abstract

Aim: Predicting distribution patterns of whale sharks (Rhincodon typus, Smith 1828) in the open ocean remains elusive owing to few pelagic records. We developed multivariate distribution models of seasonally variant whale shark distributions derived from tuna purse-seine fishery data. We tested the hypotheses that whale sharks use a narrow temperature range, are more abundant in productive waters and select sites closer to continents than the open ocean. Location: Indian Ocean. Methods: We compared a 17-year time series of observations of whale sharks associated with tuna purse-seine sets with chlorophyll a concentration and sea surface temperature data extracted from satellite images. Different sets of pseudo-absences based on random distributions, distance to shark locations and tuna catch were generated to account for spatiotemporal variation in sampling effort and probability of detection. We applied generalized linear, spatial mixed-effects and Maximum Entropy models to predict seasonal variation in habitat suitability and produced maps of distribution. Results: The saturated generalized linear models including bathymetric slope, depth, distance to shore, the quadratic of mean sea surface temperature, sea surface temperature variance and chlorophyll a had the highest relative statistical support, with the highest percent deviance explained when using random pseudo-absences with fixed effect-only models and the tuna pseudo-absences with mixed-effects models (e.g. 58% and 26% in autumn, respectively). Maximum Entropy results suggested that whale sharks responded mainly to variation in depth, chlorophyll a and temperature in all seasons. Bathymetric slope had only a minor influence on the presence. Main conclusions: Whale shark habitat suitability in the Indian Ocean is mainly correlated with spatial variation in sea surface temperature. The relative influence of this predictor provides a basis for predicting habitat suitability in the open ocean, possibly giving insights into the migratory behaviour of the world’s largest fish. Our results also provide a baseline for temperature-dependent predictions of distributional changes in the future.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record