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Dryad

Sea temperature effects on depth use and habitat selection in a marine fish community

Cite this dataset

Freitas, Carla; Villegas-Ríos, David; Moland, Even; Olsen, Esben Moland (2021). Sea temperature effects on depth use and habitat selection in a marine fish community [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.37pvmcvk6

Abstract

1. Understanding the responses of aquatic animals to temperature variability is essential to predict impacts of future climate change and to inform conservation and management. Most ectotherms such as fish are expected to adjust their behaviour to avoid extreme temperatures and minimize acute changes in body temperature. In coastal Skagerrak, Norway, sea surface temperature (SST) ranges seasonally from 0 to over 20 °C, representing a challenge to the fish community which includes both cold-, cool- and warm-water affinity species.

2. By acoustically tracking 111 individuals of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua), pollack (Pollachius pollachius) and ballan wrasse (Labrus bergylta) in 2015 - 2018, we examined how coexisting species within a fish community adjusted their behaviour (i.e. vertical distribution in the water column and habitat selection) to cope with the thermal variation.

3. Mixed-effect models showed that thermal preference was a main driver of behaviour and habitat use of the fish community in a southern Norwegian fjord. Cod used colder waters, compared with pollack and ballan wrasse. Increases in SST during summer were associated with the use of deeper, colder waters by cod, especially by larger individuals, and conversely with the occupancy of shallower areas by pollack and ballan wrasse. During winter, when SST dropped and the thermal stratification reversed, pollack and ballan wrasse moved to deeper, relatively warmer areas, while cod selected shallower, colder habitats. Though habitat selection was affected by temperature, species-specific habitat selection was observed even when temperature was similar throughout habitats.

4. This study shows how cohabiting fish species respond to thermal heterogeneity, suggesting that i) temperature regulates the access to the different depths and habitats and ii) behavioural plasticity may be an important factor for coping with temperature variability and potentially for adaptation to climate change.

Funding

The Research Council of Norway, Award: 294926

European Union’s Horizon 2020, Award: 793627

Regionale forskningsfond Oslofjordfondet, Award: 272090

European Union’s Horizon 2020, Award: 793627