“…From the 15th c., Bosphorus trap fisheries recorded BFT migrations into the Black Sea from April, with the majority believed to return to the Marmara Sea or Aegean Sea by September, due to poor winter conditions (Cort & Abaunza, 2019;. We consider it likely that low δ 13 C, δ 15 N and δ 34 S values in BFT from Istanbul were promoted by autumn or winter foraging in the Marmara or Black Sea, as predicted by early-20th c. scientists (Devedjian, 1926;Sara, 1964) Genomic analysis is required to exclude the possibility that Black Sea BFT represented a separate spawning population but since preliminary genetic results (Andrews et al, 2021) did not support this theory and juveniles have never been caught in this region (Di Natale, 2015), we find it more likely that the Black Sea migration and the Marmara Sea residency was a prey-dependent, learned behaviour, as part of a collective memory, which takes time to rebuild (De Luca et al, 2014;Petitgas et al, 2010). Regardless, the return of Black Sea BFT will depend heavily on the recovery of ecosystems and trophic cascades in the Marmara Sea, Black Sea and Azov Sea, which remain poor after overexploitation (Demirel et al, 2020;Ulman et al, 2020).…”