2017
DOI: 10.3354/meps12306
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Movements of the white shark Carcharodon carcharias in the North Atlantic Ocean

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Cited by 74 publications
(102 citation statements)
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References 60 publications
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“…It is increasingly clear that pelagic fishes throughout the global ocean conduct long-range migratory movements (e.g., Block et al, 2011;Skomal et al, 2017) and connect the surface and deep ocean through meso-and bathy-pelagic dive behavior Thorrold et al, 2014). The basking sharks tagged in the present study were no exception, making some of the longest horizontal movements of any ocean species tagged to date (Block et al, 2005;Bonfil, 2005;Hays et al, 2006;Skomal et al, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 62%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It is increasingly clear that pelagic fishes throughout the global ocean conduct long-range migratory movements (e.g., Block et al, 2011;Skomal et al, 2017) and connect the surface and deep ocean through meso-and bathy-pelagic dive behavior Thorrold et al, 2014). The basking sharks tagged in the present study were no exception, making some of the longest horizontal movements of any ocean species tagged to date (Block et al, 2005;Bonfil, 2005;Hays et al, 2006;Skomal et al, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 62%
“…The basking sharks tagged in the present study were no exception, making some of the longest horizontal movements of any ocean species tagged to date (Block et al, 2005;Bonfil, 2005;Hays et al, 2006;Skomal et al, 2017). Tagged individuals moved through several distinct water masses of the western Atlantic, and spent significant time in the mesopelagic, demonstrating the ability of basking sharks to traverse a wide range of environments from the surface to deep ocean across a 25 • C temperature range.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 68%
“…Predicting abundance or evaluating status is more problematic for data‐poor species in which incidental captures in fisheries are rare and sporadic (Punt, Smith, & Smith, 2011). White shark are a good example: For any given population, individuals are encountered infrequently over a vast geographical range (Bonfil et al, 2005; Skomal, Braun, Chisholm, & Thorrold, 2017), interact with diverse fisheries in national and international waters (Dewar et al, 2013; Queiroz et al, 2019), and thus have limited potential for using catches to monitor absolute (as opposed to relative) abundance (Baum et al, 2003; Burgess et al, 2005; Curtis et al, 2014). A reliable time‐series of total removals for white shark in the Northwest Atlantic is not available due to the need to identify and scale up observed interactions from multiple fleets where observation rates tend to be low (Curtis et al, 2018; Dulvy et al, 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Information on such broad‐scale movements has, on the whole, come from commercial fisheries research (Kenchington, ) with studies of more esoteric species emerging over recent decades via satellite telemetry and mark–recapture (Hays et al ., ; Kohler et al ., ; Sims, ). Notable examples include the pan‐Atlantic movements of spurdogfish Squalus acanthias L. 1758 (Holden, ), white Carcharodon carcharias (L. 1758) (Skomal et al ., ) and porbeagle Lamna nasus (Bonnaterre 1788) sharks (Cameron et al ., ). Genetic approaches suggest that ocean scale‐mixing may also be common for other large shark species, including both blue Prionace glauca (L. 1758) (Veríssimo et al ., ) and basking sharks Cetorhinus maximus (Gunnerus 1765) (Hoelzel et al ., ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%