Over 20% of marine fishes shifting in the North and Barents Seas, but not in the Norwegian Sea
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31612Dato
2023-08-31Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Gordo Vilaseca, Francesc; Pecuchet, Laurene Anne Marie; Coll, Marta; Reiss, Henning; Jueterbock, Alexander; Costello, Mark JohnSammendrag
Climate warming generally induces poleward range expansions and equatorward
range contractions of species’ environmental niches on a global scale. Here, we
examined the direction and magnitude of species biomass centroid geographic shifts
in relation to temperature and depth for 83 fish species in 9,522 standardised research
trawls from the North Sea (1998–2020) to the Norwegian (2000–2020) and Barents
Sea (2004–2020). We detected an overall significant northward shift of the marine
fish community biomass in the North Sea, and individual species northward shifts in
the Barents and North Seas, in 20% and 25% of the species’ biomass centroids in each
respective region. We did not detect overall community shifts in the Norwegian Sea,
where two species (8%) shifted in each direction (northwards and southwards).
Among 9 biological traits, species biogeographic assignation, preferred temperature,
age at maturity and maximum depth were significant explanatory variables for
species latitudinal shifts in some of the study areas, and Arctic species shifted
significantly faster than boreal species in the Barents Sea. Overall, our results suggest
a strong influence of other factors, such as biological interactions, in determining
several species’ recent geographic shifts.
Forlag
PeerJSitering
Gordo Vilaseca F, Pecuchet, Coll, Reiss, Jueterbock, Costello. Over 20% of marine fishes shifting in the North and Barents Seas, but not in the Norwegian Sea. PeerJ. 2023;11Metadata
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