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Sea surface temperature dictates movement and habitat connectivity of Atlantic cod in a coastal fjord system

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Sea surface temperature dictates movement and habitat connectivity of Atlantic cod in a coastal fjord system. / Staveley, Thomas A. B.; Jacoby, David M. P.; Perry, Diana et al.
In: Ecology and Evolution, Vol. 9, No. 16, 31.08.2019, p. 9076-9086.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Staveley, TAB, Jacoby, DMP, Perry, D, Meijs, F, Lagenfelt, I, Cremle, M & Gullström, M 2019, 'Sea surface temperature dictates movement and habitat connectivity of Atlantic cod in a coastal fjord system', Ecology and Evolution, vol. 9, no. 16, pp. 9076-9086. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5453

APA

Staveley, T. A. B., Jacoby, D. M. P., Perry, D., Meijs, F., Lagenfelt, I., Cremle, M., & Gullström, M. (2019). Sea surface temperature dictates movement and habitat connectivity of Atlantic cod in a coastal fjord system. Ecology and Evolution, 9(16), 9076-9086. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5453

Vancouver

Staveley TAB, Jacoby DMP, Perry D, Meijs F, Lagenfelt I, Cremle M et al. Sea surface temperature dictates movement and habitat connectivity of Atlantic cod in a coastal fjord system. Ecology and Evolution. 2019 Aug 31;9(16):9076-9086. Epub 2019 Jul 21. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5453

Author

Staveley, Thomas A. B. ; Jacoby, David M. P. ; Perry, Diana et al. / Sea surface temperature dictates movement and habitat connectivity of Atlantic cod in a coastal fjord system. In: Ecology and Evolution. 2019 ; Vol. 9, No. 16. pp. 9076-9086.

Bibtex

@article{c909f20c84684a3fb67105d2a0e254f0,
title = "Sea surface temperature dictates movement and habitat connectivity of Atlantic cod in a coastal fjord system",
abstract = "While movements of organisms have been studied across a myriad of environments, information is often lacking regarding spatio-seasonal patterning in complex temperate coastal systems. Highly mobile fish form an integral part of marine food webs providing linkages within and among habitats, between patches of habitats, and at different life stages. We investigated how movement, activity, and connectivity patterns of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) are influenced by dynamic environmental conditions. Movement patterns of 39 juvenile and subadult Atlantic cod were assessed in two coastal sites in the Swedish Skagerrak for 5 months. We used passive acoustic telemetry and network analysis to assess seasonal and spatial movement patterns of cod and their relationships to different environmental factors, using statistical correlations, analysis of recurrent spatial motifs, and generalized linear mixed models. Temperature, in combination with physical barriers, precludes significant connectivity (complex motifs) within the system. Sea surface temperature had a strong influence on connectivity (node strength, degree, and motif frequency), where changes from warmer summer waters to colder winter waters significantly reduced movement activity of fish. As the seasons changed, movement of fish gradually decreased from large-scale (km) linkages in the summer to more localized movement patterns in the winter (limited to 100s m). Certain localized areas, however, were identified as important for connectivity throughout the whole study period, likely due to these multiple-habitat areas fulfilling functions required for foraging and shelter. This study provides new knowledge regarding inshore movement dynamics of juvenile and subadult Atlantic cod that use complex, coastal fjord systems. The findings show that connectivity, seasonal patterns in particular, should be carefully considered when selecting conservation areas to promote marine stewardship.",
keywords = "acoustic telemetry, coastal seascape ecology, fish movement, network analysis, seagrass habitat",
author = "Staveley, {Thomas A. B.} and Jacoby, {David M. P.} and Diana Perry and Felix Meijs and Ingvar Lagenfelt and Mikael Cremle and Martin Gullstr{\"o}m",
year = "2019",
month = aug,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1002/ece3.5453",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "9076--9086",
journal = "Ecology and Evolution",
issn = "2045-7758",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
number = "16",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sea surface temperature dictates movement and habitat connectivity of Atlantic cod in a coastal fjord system

AU - Staveley, Thomas A. B.

AU - Jacoby, David M. P.

AU - Perry, Diana

AU - Meijs, Felix

AU - Lagenfelt, Ingvar

AU - Cremle, Mikael

AU - Gullström, Martin

PY - 2019/8/31

Y1 - 2019/8/31

N2 - While movements of organisms have been studied across a myriad of environments, information is often lacking regarding spatio-seasonal patterning in complex temperate coastal systems. Highly mobile fish form an integral part of marine food webs providing linkages within and among habitats, between patches of habitats, and at different life stages. We investigated how movement, activity, and connectivity patterns of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) are influenced by dynamic environmental conditions. Movement patterns of 39 juvenile and subadult Atlantic cod were assessed in two coastal sites in the Swedish Skagerrak for 5 months. We used passive acoustic telemetry and network analysis to assess seasonal and spatial movement patterns of cod and their relationships to different environmental factors, using statistical correlations, analysis of recurrent spatial motifs, and generalized linear mixed models. Temperature, in combination with physical barriers, precludes significant connectivity (complex motifs) within the system. Sea surface temperature had a strong influence on connectivity (node strength, degree, and motif frequency), where changes from warmer summer waters to colder winter waters significantly reduced movement activity of fish. As the seasons changed, movement of fish gradually decreased from large-scale (km) linkages in the summer to more localized movement patterns in the winter (limited to 100s m). Certain localized areas, however, were identified as important for connectivity throughout the whole study period, likely due to these multiple-habitat areas fulfilling functions required for foraging and shelter. This study provides new knowledge regarding inshore movement dynamics of juvenile and subadult Atlantic cod that use complex, coastal fjord systems. The findings show that connectivity, seasonal patterns in particular, should be carefully considered when selecting conservation areas to promote marine stewardship.

AB - While movements of organisms have been studied across a myriad of environments, information is often lacking regarding spatio-seasonal patterning in complex temperate coastal systems. Highly mobile fish form an integral part of marine food webs providing linkages within and among habitats, between patches of habitats, and at different life stages. We investigated how movement, activity, and connectivity patterns of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) are influenced by dynamic environmental conditions. Movement patterns of 39 juvenile and subadult Atlantic cod were assessed in two coastal sites in the Swedish Skagerrak for 5 months. We used passive acoustic telemetry and network analysis to assess seasonal and spatial movement patterns of cod and their relationships to different environmental factors, using statistical correlations, analysis of recurrent spatial motifs, and generalized linear mixed models. Temperature, in combination with physical barriers, precludes significant connectivity (complex motifs) within the system. Sea surface temperature had a strong influence on connectivity (node strength, degree, and motif frequency), where changes from warmer summer waters to colder winter waters significantly reduced movement activity of fish. As the seasons changed, movement of fish gradually decreased from large-scale (km) linkages in the summer to more localized movement patterns in the winter (limited to 100s m). Certain localized areas, however, were identified as important for connectivity throughout the whole study period, likely due to these multiple-habitat areas fulfilling functions required for foraging and shelter. This study provides new knowledge regarding inshore movement dynamics of juvenile and subadult Atlantic cod that use complex, coastal fjord systems. The findings show that connectivity, seasonal patterns in particular, should be carefully considered when selecting conservation areas to promote marine stewardship.

KW - acoustic telemetry

KW - coastal seascape ecology

KW - fish movement

KW - network analysis

KW - seagrass habitat

U2 - 10.1002/ece3.5453

DO - 10.1002/ece3.5453

M3 - Journal article

VL - 9

SP - 9076

EP - 9086

JO - Ecology and Evolution

JF - Ecology and Evolution

SN - 2045-7758

IS - 16

ER -