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Environmental stress reduces shark residency to coral reefs

Biology

Environmental stress reduces shark residency to coral reefs

M. J. Williamson, E. J. Tebbs, et al.

This study reveals how environmental stress dramatically affects grey reef shark residency in the Chagos Archipelago. Researchers, including Michael J. Williamson and Emma J. Tebbs, utilized 8 years of tracking data and a satellite-based stress index, uncovering that increased stress leads to reduced residency and longer absences from shallow reefs, with lasting impacts on shark physiology and reef ecosystems.... show more
Abstract
Coral reef ecosystems are highly threatened and can be extremely sensitive to the effects of climate change. Multiple shark species rely on coral reefs as important habitat and, as such, play a number of significant ecological roles in these ecosystems. How environmental stress impacts routine, site-attached reef shark behavior, remains relatively unexplored. Here, we combine 8 years of acoustic tracking data (2013–2020) from grey reef sharks resident to the remote coral reefs of the Chagos Archipelago in the Central Indian Ocean, with a satellite-based index of coral reef environmental stress exposure. We show that on average across the region, increased stress on the reefs significantly reduces grey reef shark residency, promoting more diffuse space use and increasing time away from shallow forereefs. Importantly, this impact has a lagged effect for up to 16 months. This may have important physiological and conservation consequences for reef sharks, as well as broader implications for reef ecosystem functioning. As climate change is predicted to increase environmental stress on coral reef ecosystems, understanding how site-attached predators respond to stress will be crucial for forecasting the functional significance of altering predator behavior and the potential impacts on conservation for both reef sharks and coral reefs themselves.
Publisher
Communications Biology
Published On
Sep 09, 2024
Authors
Michael J. Williamson, Emma J. Tebbs, David J. Curnick, Francesco Ferretti, Aaron B. Carlisle, Taylor K. Chapple, Robert J. Schallert, David M. Tickler, Barbara A. Block, David M. P. Jacoby
Tags
grey reef shark
environmental stress
coral reefs
Chagos Archipelago
acoustic tracking
ecosystem functioning
conservation
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