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Flexible use of a dynamic energy landscape buffers a marine predator against extreme climate variability

Gemma Carroll, Stephanie Brodie, Rebecca Whitlock, James E. Ganong, Steven J. Bograd, Elliott L. Hazen, Barbara A. Block

2021Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Animal migrations track predictable seasonal patterns of resource availability and suitable thermal habitat. As climate change alters this ‘energy landscape’, some migratory species may struggle to adapt. We examined how climate variability influences movements, thermal habitat selection and energy intake by juvenile Pacific bluefin tuna ( Thunnus orientalis ) during seasonal foraging migrations in the California Current. We tracked 242 tuna across 15 years (2002–2016) with high-resolution archival tags, estimating their daily energy intake via abdominal warming associated with digestion (the ‘heat increment of feeding’). The poleward extent of foraging migrations was flexible in response to climate variability, allowing tuna to track poleward displacements of thermal habitat where their standard metabolic rates were minimized. During a marine heatwave that saw temperature anomalies of up to +2.5°C in the California Current, spatially explicit energy intake by tuna was approximately 15% lower than average. However, by shifting their mean seasonal migration approximately 900 km poleward, tuna remained in waters within their optimal temperature range and increased their energy intake. Our findings illustrate how tradeoffs between physiology and prey availability structure migration in a highly mobile vertebrate, and suggest that flexible migration strategies can buffer animals against energetic costs associated with climate variability and change.

Topics & Concepts

ForagingThunnusTunaHabitatClimate changeEnvironmental scienceEcologyPredationRange (aeronautics)Optimal foraging theoryGlobal warmingScombridaeApex predatorOceanographyFisheryBiologyGeographyGeologyMaterials scienceFish <Actinopterygii>Composite materialMarine and fisheries researchFish Ecology and Management StudiesMarine animal studies overview
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