Many predator species make regular excursions from near-surface waters to the twilight (200 to 1,000 m) and midnight (1,000 to 3,000 m) zones of the deep pelagic ocean. While the occurrence of significant vertical movements into the deep ocean has evolved independently across taxonomic groups, the functional role(s) and ecological significance of these movements remain poorly understood. Here, we integrate results from satellite tagging efforts with model predictions of deep prey layers in the North Atlantic Ocean to determine whether prey distributions are correlated with vertical habitat use across 12 species of predators. Using 3D movement data for 344 individuals who traversed nearly 1.5 million km of pelagic ocean in 42,000 d, we fou...
It has been speculated that some deep-sea fishes can display large vertical migrations and likely do...
Ecological connections between surface waters and the deep ocean remain poorly studied despite the h...
Mesopelagic fish biomass has been estimated at 7–10 billion metric tons, an order of magnitude highe...
<p>Many predator species make regular excursions from near-surface waters to the twilight (200...
Quantifying vertical distributions of pelagic predators elucidates pelagic ecosystem structure and i...
<p>Increased pressure has been placed on researchers to focus on processes at an ecosystem level. H...
Advances in satellite tracking and archival technologies now allow marine animal movements and behav...
Pelagic marine predators face unprecedented challenges and uncertain futures. Overexploitation and c...
Every night across the world’s oceans, numerous marine animals arrive at the surface of the ocean to...
Movements of wide-ranging top predators can now be studied effectively using satellite and archival ...
The classical paradigm of the vertical ecology of the pelagic ocean is that the bathypelagic fauna (...
We targeted habitat used differentially by deep-diving, air-breathing predators to empirically sampl...
It has been speculated that some deep-sea fishes can display large vertical migrations and likely do...
Ecological connections between surface waters and the deep ocean remain poorly studied despite the h...
Mesopelagic fish biomass has been estimated at 7–10 billion metric tons, an order of magnitude highe...
<p>Many predator species make regular excursions from near-surface waters to the twilight (200...
Quantifying vertical distributions of pelagic predators elucidates pelagic ecosystem structure and i...
<p>Increased pressure has been placed on researchers to focus on processes at an ecosystem level. H...
Advances in satellite tracking and archival technologies now allow marine animal movements and behav...
Pelagic marine predators face unprecedented challenges and uncertain futures. Overexploitation and c...
Every night across the world’s oceans, numerous marine animals arrive at the surface of the ocean to...
Movements of wide-ranging top predators can now be studied effectively using satellite and archival ...
The classical paradigm of the vertical ecology of the pelagic ocean is that the bathypelagic fauna (...
We targeted habitat used differentially by deep-diving, air-breathing predators to empirically sampl...
It has been speculated that some deep-sea fishes can display large vertical migrations and likely do...
Ecological connections between surface waters and the deep ocean remain poorly studied despite the h...
Mesopelagic fish biomass has been estimated at 7–10 billion metric tons, an order of magnitude highe...