グリーンランドシャークの生育地としてのスカゲラク海域を特定(New study points to Skagerrak as nursery area for the enigmatic Greenland shark)

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2025-07-09 コペンハーゲン大学(UCPH)

コペンハーゲン大学の研究チームは、新たな調査により、ノルウェーとデンマークの間にあるスカゲラク海域が、希少で長寿なグリーンランドシャーク(ニシオンデンザメ)の「保育場」として機能している可能性を示した。これまで北極域の深海に生息すると考えられていたが、若い個体の出現がスカゲラクで確認され、繁殖や成長の場であることが示唆された。この発見は、絶滅危惧種である本種の生態や保護戦略に新たな視点を提供するもので、今後の海洋保全活動に重要な科学的基盤をもたらすと期待される。

<関連情報>

北大西洋北部におけるグリーンランドシャークSomniosus microcephalus(Bloch & Schneider, 1801)のライフステージの空間分布 Spatial Distribution of Greenland Shark Somniosus microcephalus (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) Life Stages Across the Northern North Atlantic

Julius Nielsen, Jørgen Schou Christiansen, Kim Præbel, Peter Rask Møller, Brynn Devine, Klara Jakobsdóttir, Nicolas Straube, Adriana Nogueira, Margaret Treble, Kevin Hedges …

Ecology and Evolution  Published: 29 June 2025

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71564

グリーンランドシャークの生育地としてのスカゲラク海域を特定(New study points to Skagerrak as nursery area for the enigmatic Greenland shark)

ABSTRACT

Greenland sharks Somniosus microcephalus (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) are long-lived and highly migratory animals distributed throughout deep and/or cold waters of the North Atlantic Ocean. Extensive bycatch in several demersal fisheries in the Arctic has raised conservation concerns for the species, of which surprisingly little is known about the spatial distribution in relation to their life history. In the current study, size, sex, and life stage composition of 1610 Greenland sharks were examined from 11 geographic regions across the northern North Atlantic Ocean. Subadult females dominated in most regions, and while adult females were scarce or absent in, for example, northern Arctic Canada and Svalbard, they dominated in southwest Greenland and Iceland. Furthermore, in southern Arctic Canada, northwestern Greenland, and southeastern Greenland, adult females were more commonly encountered in offshore waters than inshore. Depth (25 m to 1375 m) had little effect on the spatial distribution irrespective of length and life stage, whereas water temperatures (-1.54°C to 10.9°C) conclusively showed that adult females preferred warm water (> 4°C). Large juveniles were encountered in most regions but dominated in Skagerrak and in offshore southern Arctic Canada. Small juveniles and neonates were encountered with only five and zero records, respectively, combined for all analyzed regions. In an additional effort to identify these rare, small-sized specimens, scrutinization of museum collections and databases of scientific institutions disclosed a cluster of ten neonates (total length < 60 cm) and two small juveniles (total length 60-89 cm) along the mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Irminger Sea. This finding is unique and suggests the location of a potential Greenland shark pupping ground on or in the vicinity of the mid-Atlantic Ridge and Irminger Sea. All combined, this study provides new insights into the life history of the Greenland shark, which will aid the development of targeted conservation measures.

1404水産水域環境
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