Seasonal Variation in Pacific Sleeper Shark (<em>Somniosus pacificus</em>) Habitat Use in Prince William Sound, AK

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Abstract

The Pacific sleeper shark (Somniosus pacificus, PSS) is a long-lived, deep-water and sub-polar species that exhibits flexible foraging strategies, likely combining scavenging with active predation on a broad range of prey, yet their role in marine food chains and impact on commercial species remain undetermined. Tracking the location of PSS in Alaskan coastal waters is extremely challenging given the predominantly aphotic depths that these sharks occupy, often in spatially constrained and critically under-sampled regions: deep, steep-flanked, convoluted fjords of Prince William Sound (PWS). From the first ever, year-long depth and temperature records recovered from archiving pop-up satellite-linked transmitters (n=7), we characterized the residence distributions, depth, and thermal habitat for sharks within the PWS fjords and identified seasonal and temporal variation in habitat use. Depths recorded from the seven sharks ranged from 3-572m, and pop-up tag locations suggested a high degree intra-annual residency within western PWS. Ambient water temperatures ranged from 2.65 to 11.1⁰C, with little deviation from the median of 5.9⁰C. Seasonal patterns emerged within and across individuals relative to the variation in vertical movements, ambient temperatures, and horizontal movements that could reflect resource-oriented strategies. The high degree of residency combined with extensive use of the water column facilitates the use of physically recoverable, high-resolution behavioral and environmental samplers on PSS. This adaptive sampling using PSS as platforms of opportunity may in turn enable the use of PSS as climate and ecosystem sentinels.

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