Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

< Back to Article

Figure 1.

Location of Osprey Reef in the Coral Sea, Australia (A and B).

Panel C shows the depth contours (in metres) around Osprey Reef, the VR2 receiver array forming a ring around the perimeter of Osprey Reef, and the 5 receivers within the lagoon. Triangles represent receivers. North Horn, Admiralty and False Entrance are the shark tagging locations.

More »

Figure 1 Expand

Figure 2.

Timeline of the daily detections of acoustic coded individual sharks at Osprey Reef from March 2008 to June 2009.

Individuals are classified by their tagging location (FE- False Entrance, Ad- Admiralty, NH – North Horn, L – lagoon) and acoustic transmitter ID. Note that all grey reef sharks tagged in the lagoon were juveniles. The arrows at the top of the graph represent the period from the 4th June to the 29th September when the North Horn (N) receiver had a battery failure.

More »

Figure 2 Expand

Figure 3.

Bubble plot showing the percentage of hours that each species was detected at each receiver.

White circles - whitetip reef sharks; grey circles - grey reef sharks; black circles - silvertip sharks.

More »

Figure 3 Expand

Figure 4.

Area use maps, showing the 95% contours of the number of hours of detection occurred for sharks at different tagging locations and the comparison of spatial use with Pianka’s niche overlap value (O), where 0 represents no overlap and 1 equals total overlap.

Panel A - whitetip reef sharks tagged at three locations.Note that for the O value calculation, sharks tagged at Admiralty and False Entrance were pooled and compared with North Horn individuals. Panel B – Adult grey reef sharks tagged at two locations. Panel C – All adult grey reef sharks compared with juveniles. The grey shaded area represents the 80% contours of juvenile hourly detections.

More »

Figure 4 Expand

Figure 5.

Fast Fourier transform of the time series of number of detections per hour for one representative individual of each species at receivers N and W6.

Periodicities of peaks are given over the peaks. Receivers N and W6 were chosen for this analysis because these correspond to the tagging areas, and most individuals spent a large part of their time in the vicinity of the tagging place throughout the study. Therefore, data from these receivers provides more complete information on the dial activity periodicity. FFT analysis for the other adult individuals of the three species that were regularly detected at these receivers throughout the course of the study led to similar results.

More »

Figure 5 Expand

Figure 6.

Circular plots showing the distribution of the number of individuals detected at each hour of the day for each of the main receivers (in % of total) for whitetip and grey reef sharks.

Note the differences in scale between plots. Different shadings represent the number of sharks detected in a given hour.

More »

Figure 6 Expand