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      Warm water occupancy by North Sea cod.

      1 ,
      Proceedings. Biological sciences

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          Abstract

          The North Sea has warmed in recent years and there is an ongoing debate into how this is affecting the distribution of fishes and other marine organisms. Of particular interest is the commercially important Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua L.), which has declined sharply in abundance in the North Sea over the past 20 years. Observations of the temperature experienced by 129 individual cod throughout the North Sea were made during a large-scale electronic tagging programme conducted between 1999 and 2005. We asked whether individual cod fully occupied the thermal habitat available to them. To this end, we compared the temperature experience of cod with independently measured contemporaneous sea-bottom temperature data. The majority of cod experienced a warmer fraction of the sea than was potentially available to them. By summer, most of the individuals in the south experienced temperatures considered superoptimal for growth. Cooler waters were within the reach of the cod and a small number of individuals migrated to areas that allowed them to experience lower temperatures, indicating that the cod had the capacity to find cooler water. Most did not, however, suggesting that the changing thermal regime of the North Sea is not yet causing adult cod to move to cooler waters.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Proc. Biol. Sci.
          Proceedings. Biological sciences
          0962-8452
          0962-8452
          Mar 22 2007
          : 274
          : 1611
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Fisheries Research Services, Marine Laboratory, PO Box 101, 375 Victoria Road, Aberdeen AB11 9DB, UK. f.neat@marlab.ac.uk
          Article
          M813864JG4837235
          10.1098/rspb.2006.0212
          2093972
          17251093
          71c85dd5-c224-4b8e-87b8-96a6b0f57bad
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