Hierarchical habitat selection by a predatory fish in a patchy seascape. Article

Rodemann, Jonathan, White, Mack, James, W Ryan et al. (2025). Hierarchical habitat selection by a predatory fish in a patchy seascape. . SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 10.1038/s41598-025-27322-0

cited authors

  • Rodemann, Jonathan; White, Mack; James, W Ryan; Griffin, Lucas P; Costa, Sophia V; Furman, Bradley T; Pittman, Simon J; Gann, Daniel; Rehage, Jennifer S; Santos, Rolando O

abstract

  • Faunal habitat selection, or the disproportionate use of available resources, is closely linked to habitat composition and configuration across a seascape. However, the drivers of habitat selection operate across multiple scales and require a hierarchical approach to study. This study combines acoustic telemetry, field survey data, remote sensing, and machine learning to investigate the multi-scale (seascape and patch) habitat selection of spotted seatrout (Cynoscion nebulosus) in Florida Bay, Everglades National Park, USA. Spotted seatrout responded to both scales, as there were three patch-scale (Halodule cover, standard deviation of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) cover, and SAV species richness) and one seascape-scale (patch density) predictor in the top four. However, responses were scale-specific, exhibiting logistic responses to seascape-level variables and optimal (specific-range) responses to patch-level characteristics. This study highlights the importance of investigating habitat selection across multiple scales as climate change alters not only species ranges, but local seascapes as well.

publication date

  • December 1, 2025

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

Medium

  • Print-Electronic