[Published]: Energyscapes pinpoint marine megafauna feeding hotspots in the Mediterranean


Octobot

Robotic Staff
Staff member
Robotic Staff
Registered
Joined
Oct 15, 2005
Messages
13,383
Reaction score
271
Ocean giants shape the structure and functioning of marine food webs via trophic top-down controls, landscapes of fear, vertical and horizontal redistribution of nutrients, energy, and matter. Yet, they face threats from overfishing, pollution, habitat degradation, and climate change, and one-third of marine megafauna species are at risk of extinction, ultimately endangering the resilience of entire ecosystems. In such a context, knowing when and where megafauna find resources to balance their...

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Feb 11;122(6):e2412845122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2412845122. Epub 2025 Feb 3.

ABSTRACT

Ocean giants shape the structure and functioning of marine food webs via trophic top-down controls, landscapes of fear, vertical and horizontal redistribution of nutrients, energy, and matter. Yet, they face threats from overfishing, pollution, habitat degradation, and climate change, and one-third of marine megafauna species are at risk of extinction, ultimately endangering the resilience of entire ecosystems. In such a context, knowing when and where megafauna find resources to balance their substantial energy requirements is critical for their management. Through an energyscape approach integrating abundance censuses, diet, and energy requirements, we investigated the prey consumption patterns of Mediterranean marine megafauna during the summer. We thereby shed light on a diverse guild of species composed of fishes, mammals, reptiles, and birds and estimated that 4.1 million individuals consume 1.6 million tons of prey each summer, pelagic cephalopods being the primary food resource and cetaceans and tunas being key players in the community. Spatial patterns in prey consumption reflected the diverse distribution and needs of the megafauna species and underlined the critical importance of the western Mediterranean for the megafauna community. Conservation strategies should prioritize spatial and biological diversity to safeguard megafauna and ecosystem functions across the Mediterranean basin.

PMID:39899720 | DOI:10.1073/pnas.2412845122

Charlotte Lambert, Annette C Broderick, Damla Beton, Ana Cañadas, Cécile Dars, Andrew Di Matteo, Lola Gilbert, Joan Giménez, Ioannis Keramidas, Joan Navarro, Josie L Palmer, Robin T E Snape, Laura Sparks, Jérôme Spitz, Athanassios C Tsikliras, Auriane Virgili, David Grémillet

Visit Publication page...
 
Back
Top