Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-1-2019
Publication Title
Diversity and Distributions
Volume
25
Issue
3
First Page
328
Keywords
animal movement, biologging, climate change, conservation, fishes, marine mammals, protected areas, seabirds
Last Page
345
Abstract
Aim: Climate change is altering marine ecosystems worldwide and is most pronounced in the Arctic. Economic development is increasing leading to more disturbances and pressures on Arctic wildlife. Identifying areas that support higher levels of predator abundance and biodiversity is important for the implementation of targeted conservation measures across the Arctic. Location: Primarily Canadian Arctic marine waters but also parts of the United States, Greenland and Russia. Methods: We compiled the largest data set of existing telemetry data for marine predators in the North American Arctic consisting of 1,283 individuals from 21 species. Data were arranged into four species groups: (a) cetaceans and pinnipeds, (b) polar bears Ursus maritimus (c) seabirds, and (d) fishes to address the following objectives: (a) to identify abundance hotspots for each species group in the summer–autumn and winter–spring; (b) to identify species diversity hotspots across all species groups and extent of overlap with exclusive economic zones; and (c) to perform a gap analysis that assesses amount of overlap between species diversity hotspots with existing protected areas. Results: Abundance and species diversity hotpots during summer–autumn and winter–spring were identified in Baffin Bay, Davis Strait, Hudson Bay, Hudson Strait, Amundsen Gulf, and the Beaufort, Chukchi and Bering seas both within and across species groups. Abundance and species diversity hotpots occurred within the continental slope in summer–autumn and offshore in areas of moving pack ice in winter–spring. Gap analysis revealed that the current level of conservation protection that overlaps species diversity hotspots is low covering only 5% (77,498 km 2 ) in summer–autumn and 7% (83,202 km 2 ) in winter–spring. Main conclusions: We identified several areas of potential importance for Arctic marine predators that could provide policymakers with a starting point for conservation measures given the multitude of threats facing the Arctic. These results are relevant to multilevel and multinational governance to protect this vulnerable ecosystem in our rapidly changing world.
DOI
10.1111/ddi.12860
ISSN
13669516
E-ISSN
14724642
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Yurkowski, David J.; Auger-Méthé, Marie; Mallory, Mark L.; Wong, Sarah N.P.; Gilchrist, Grant; Derocher, Andrew E.; Richardson, Evan; Lunn, Nicholas J.; Hussey, Nigel E.; Marcoux, Marianne; Togunov, Ron R.; Fisk, Aaron T.; Harwood, Lois A.; Dietz, Rune; Rosing-Asvid, Aqqalu; Born, Erik W.; Mosbech, Anders; Fort, Jérôme; Grémillet, David; and Loseto, Lisa. (2019). Abundance and species diversity hotspots of tracked marine predators across the North American Arctic. Diversity and Distributions, 25 (3), 328-345.
https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/glierpub/306
Included in
Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology Commons, Biodiversity Commons, Biology Commons, Marine Biology Commons