Association of whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) with thermo-biological frontal systems of the eastern tropical Pacific.

Satellite tracking of 27 whale sharks in the eastern tropical Pacific, examined in relation to environmental data, indicates preferential occupancy of thermo-biological frontal systems. In these systems, thermal gradients are caused by wind-forced circulation and mixing, and biological gradients are...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: John P Ryan, Jonathan R Green, Eduardo Espinoza, Alex R Hearn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5576648?pdf=render
id doaj-fdbb193b85e44e81a0443aa99c8b6398
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fdbb193b85e44e81a0443aa99c8b63982020-11-25T01:24:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01128e018259910.1371/journal.pone.0182599Association of whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) with thermo-biological frontal systems of the eastern tropical Pacific.John P RyanJonathan R GreenEduardo EspinozaAlex R HearnSatellite tracking of 27 whale sharks in the eastern tropical Pacific, examined in relation to environmental data, indicates preferential occupancy of thermo-biological frontal systems. In these systems, thermal gradients are caused by wind-forced circulation and mixing, and biological gradients are caused by associated nutrient enrichment and enhanced primary productivity. Two of the frontal systems result from upwelling, driven by divergence in the current systems along the equator and the west coast of South America; the third results from wind jet dynamics off Central America. All whale sharks were tagged near Darwin Island, Galápagos, within the equatorial Pacific upwelling system. Occupancy of frontal habitat is pronounced in synoptic patterns of shark locations in relation to serpentine, temporally varying thermal fronts across a zonal expanse > 4000 km. 80% of shark positions in northern equatorial upwelling habitat and 100% of positions in eastern boundary upwelling habitat were located within the upwelling front. Analysis of equatorial shark locations relative to thermal gradients reveals occupancy of a transition point in environmental stability. Equatorial subsurface tag data show residence in shallow, warm (>22°C) water 94% of the time. Surface zonal current speeds for all equatorial tracking explain only 16% of the variance in shark zonal movement speeds, indicating that passive drifting is not a primary determinant of movement patterns. Movement from equatorial to eastern boundary frontal zones occurred during boreal winter, when equatorial upwelling weakens seasonally. Off Peru sharks tracked upwelling frontal positions within ~100-350 km from the coast. Off Central America, the largest tagged shark (12.8 m TL) occupied an oceanic front along the periphery of the Panama wind jet. Seasonal movement from waning equatorial upwelling to productive eastern boundary habitat is consistent with underlying trophic dynamics. Persistent shallow residence in thermo-biological frontal zones suggests the role of physical-biological interactions that concentrate food resources.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5576648?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John P Ryan
Jonathan R Green
Eduardo Espinoza
Alex R Hearn
spellingShingle John P Ryan
Jonathan R Green
Eduardo Espinoza
Alex R Hearn
Association of whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) with thermo-biological frontal systems of the eastern tropical Pacific.
PLoS ONE
author_facet John P Ryan
Jonathan R Green
Eduardo Espinoza
Alex R Hearn
author_sort John P Ryan
title Association of whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) with thermo-biological frontal systems of the eastern tropical Pacific.
title_short Association of whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) with thermo-biological frontal systems of the eastern tropical Pacific.
title_full Association of whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) with thermo-biological frontal systems of the eastern tropical Pacific.
title_fullStr Association of whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) with thermo-biological frontal systems of the eastern tropical Pacific.
title_full_unstemmed Association of whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) with thermo-biological frontal systems of the eastern tropical Pacific.
title_sort association of whale sharks (rhincodon typus) with thermo-biological frontal systems of the eastern tropical pacific.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Satellite tracking of 27 whale sharks in the eastern tropical Pacific, examined in relation to environmental data, indicates preferential occupancy of thermo-biological frontal systems. In these systems, thermal gradients are caused by wind-forced circulation and mixing, and biological gradients are caused by associated nutrient enrichment and enhanced primary productivity. Two of the frontal systems result from upwelling, driven by divergence in the current systems along the equator and the west coast of South America; the third results from wind jet dynamics off Central America. All whale sharks were tagged near Darwin Island, Galápagos, within the equatorial Pacific upwelling system. Occupancy of frontal habitat is pronounced in synoptic patterns of shark locations in relation to serpentine, temporally varying thermal fronts across a zonal expanse > 4000 km. 80% of shark positions in northern equatorial upwelling habitat and 100% of positions in eastern boundary upwelling habitat were located within the upwelling front. Analysis of equatorial shark locations relative to thermal gradients reveals occupancy of a transition point in environmental stability. Equatorial subsurface tag data show residence in shallow, warm (>22°C) water 94% of the time. Surface zonal current speeds for all equatorial tracking explain only 16% of the variance in shark zonal movement speeds, indicating that passive drifting is not a primary determinant of movement patterns. Movement from equatorial to eastern boundary frontal zones occurred during boreal winter, when equatorial upwelling weakens seasonally. Off Peru sharks tracked upwelling frontal positions within ~100-350 km from the coast. Off Central America, the largest tagged shark (12.8 m TL) occupied an oceanic front along the periphery of the Panama wind jet. Seasonal movement from waning equatorial upwelling to productive eastern boundary habitat is consistent with underlying trophic dynamics. Persistent shallow residence in thermo-biological frontal zones suggests the role of physical-biological interactions that concentrate food resources.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5576648?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT johnpryan associationofwhalesharksrhincodontypuswiththermobiologicalfrontalsystemsoftheeasterntropicalpacific
AT jonathanrgreen associationofwhalesharksrhincodontypuswiththermobiologicalfrontalsystemsoftheeasterntropicalpacific
AT eduardoespinoza associationofwhalesharksrhincodontypuswiththermobiologicalfrontalsystemsoftheeasterntropicalpacific
AT alexrhearn associationofwhalesharksrhincodontypuswiththermobiologicalfrontalsystemsoftheeasterntropicalpacific
_version_ 1725117659138228224