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Long-term movements of tiger sharks satellite-tagged in Shark Bay,Western Australia
Authors:Michael R Heithaus  Aaron J Wirsing  Lawrence M Dill  Linda I Heithaus
Institution:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University, 3000 NE 151 St., North Miami, FL 33181, USA;(2) Center for Shark Research, Mote Marine Laboratory, 1600 Ken Thompson Pkwy., Sarasota, FL 34236, USA;(3) Behavioural Ecology Research Group, Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Blvd., V5A 1S6 Burnaby, BC, Canada
Abstract:Tiger sharks are important predators in the seagrass ecosystem of Shark Bay, Australia. Although sharks appear to return to a long-term study site within the Eastern Gulf periodically, the extent of their long-term movements is not known. Five sharks fitted with satellite transmitters showed variable movement patterns. Three sharks remained within the Shark Bay region and another made a 500 km round-trip excursion to oceanic waters northwest of the bay. These four sharks showed relatively low displacement rates relative to sharks tracked over shorter time periods, suggesting that sharks move through large home ranges that include Shark Bay. Although no reliable position fixes were obtained for the fifth shark, we were able to use the timing of satellite uplinks and the position of the satellite to determine that it had moved at least 8,000 km to the coastal waters of southeast Africa in 99 days—the longest recorded movement by a tiger shark. This movement and previously documented trans-Atlantic movements suggest that tiger shark populations may mix across ocean basins and that tiger sharks are subject to anthropogenic effects at great distances from protected waters. Finally, our method for using single satellite uplinks may be useful in estimating movements for wide-ranging species that rarely provide high quality location estimates.
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