姥鲨的生物学和生态学:综述。

Advances in marine biology Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-28 DOI:10.1016/bs.amb.2023.08.005
Mauvis Gore, Ewan Camplisson, Rupert Ormond
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在这里,我们回顾了关于姥鲨的文献(Cetorhinus maximus,Gunnerus,1765),姥鲨被称为全球现存第二大鲨鱼(和鱼类)物种。Kunzlik和Sims分别于1988年和2008年发表了先前的综述,但在过去的15年里,现代电子和DNA测序技术使我们对物种行为和生态学的了解取得了长足的进步。姥鲨是浮游动物,在适当的条件下,它们会在海洋表面长时间捕食桡足类猎物,这些猎物主要是它们的食物,这种行为也因此得名。一般来说,它们是迁徙性的,在夏季的几个月里会迁移到纬度较高的水域,此时可能会在受欢迎的地点形成松散的地表觅食群落,目前最著名的是英国和爱尔兰西海岸的热点地区。该物种在全球温带水域都有发现,但现在也知道它们有时会在北半球和南半球之间的深度迁徙,以及在北半球的海洋中迁徙。过去,姥鲨在其大部分活动范围内都更为丰富,但由于有针对性的捕捞和在一些地方有意根除,姥鲨鱼在各地都变得稀少,最近东北大西洋的种群恢复是20世纪90年代开始的保护措施的结果。尽管它们具有魅力,但由于它们的迁徙和深水生活方式,它们的一些最基本的生物学过程,包括交配、妊娠和出生,在很大程度上仍然未知。相比之下,小规模档案和卫星标签的部署揭示了大规模迁徙以及水平和垂直觅食行为的细节。最近的基因研究支持了与季节性觅食地相关的场地保真度的证据,这可能解释了为什么过去当地种群在密集捕鱼期后数量减少的原因。最近使用无人机和拖曳式摄像机进行的其他研究揭示了松散的觅食群体中的社会行为元素,这些元素可能具有求偶功能并提高觅食效率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The biology and ecology of the basking shark: A review.

Here we review the literature on the basking shark (Cetorhinus maximus, Gunnerus, 1765), well known as the second largest extant shark (and fish) species globally. Previous reviews were published by Kunzlik in 1988 and Sims in 2008, but in the last 15 years modern electronic and DNA sequencing technologies have resulted in considerable advances in our knowledge of the species' behaviour and ecology. Basking sharks are planktivores and under appropriate conditions spend prolonged periods at the ocean surface feeding on copepod prey that primarily make up their diet, the behaviour that gave rise to their common name. In general, they are migratory and move into higher latitude waters during the summer months, when loose surface-feeding aggregations may form at favoured sites, the best known of which at present occur at hotspots on the west coasts of Britain and Ireland. The species is found circumglobally in temperate waters, but they are also now known on occasion to migrate at depth between northern and southern hemispheres, as well as across oceans within the northern hemisphere. In the past basking shark were more abundant across much of their range, but, consequent on targeted fisheries and in some places intentional eradication, became everywhere scarce, with recent population recovery in the north-east Atlantic being the result of protective measures initiated in the 1990s. Despite their charismatic nature, some of their most fundamental biological processes including copulation, gestation and birth remain largely unknown, due to their migratory and often deep-water lifestyle. In contrast, the deployment of small-scale archival and satellite tags has revealed the details of both broadscale migratory movements and horizontal and vertical foraging behaviours. Recent genetic studies support evidence suggesting a degree of site fidelity in relation to seasonal feeding grounds, which likely explains why in the past local populations have collapsed following periods of intensive fishing. Other recent research using aerial drones and towed cameras has revealed within loose feeding aggregations elements of social behaviour that may have a courtship function as well as enhance feeding efficiency.

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