2010
DOI: 10.3354/meps08581
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Complexities of coastal shark movements and their implications for management

Abstract: Global declines of shark populations are of concern because of their largely assumed role as moderators of ecosystem function. Without long-term data on movement patterns for many species, it is impossible to infer relative extinction risk, which varies as a function of range, dispersal and habitat specificity and use. The past 50 yr of research on coastal sharks has revealed common movement patterns among species. In the horizontal plane, measured home range size generally increases with body size. We demonst… Show more

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Cited by 275 publications
(267 citation statements)
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References 169 publications
(217 reference statements)
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“…In the marine environment, distributions can be viewed in many dimensions. For sharks, studies of horizontal distribution abound while studies of vertical (i.e., depth) distribution have received less attention (Speed et al 2010). This is particularly true of coastal systems, which sharks are traditionally thought to inhabit early in their life history (Springer 1967).…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In the marine environment, distributions can be viewed in many dimensions. For sharks, studies of horizontal distribution abound while studies of vertical (i.e., depth) distribution have received less attention (Speed et al 2010). This is particularly true of coastal systems, which sharks are traditionally thought to inhabit early in their life history (Springer 1967).…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The driving forces of these movements are the subject of increasing research attention given the need to sustainably manage fisheries that exploit these species, coupled with the realization that migrations are likely to be affected by global climate change (Dulvy et al 2008, Block et al 2011. The migratory cycles of sharks that live primarily in neritic and coastal habitats often involve predictable and repeated movements between a series of geospatially fixed locations ('site-fidelity') (Hueter et al 2005, Speed et al 2010, Bond et al 2012, Feldheim et al 2014, Chapman et al 2015. In contrast, oceanic pelagic sharks often orient to mobile environmental features such as oceanographic fronts, although sitefidelity to fixed locations does occur in oceanic pelagic species that complete part of their life-cycle over the continental shelf, along the coast, or at offshore bathymetric features such as seamounts (Casey & Kohler 1992, Bigelow et al 1999, Litvinov 2008, Block et al 2011.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the marine environment habitat preferences, for example for particular substrates, temperatures or depths, are fundamental drivers of species distributions, migrations and fine-scale movements (Speed et al 2010, Gouraguine et al 2011, Queiroz et al 2016. Consequently, an understanding of habitat preferences is essential when considering conservation strategies (Kaiser 2005, Speed et al 2010, Queiroz et al 2016.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%