# Linking oceanic variability, euphausiid hotspot persistence, and marine predator distribution along Canada's west coast

**Authors:** Rhian Evans, Stéphane Gauthier, Clifford L. K. Robinson, Philina A. English, Chelsea Stanley, Brianna M. Wright, Linda Nichol

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/eap.70141 · Ecological Applications · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

This study identifies areas along Canada's west coast where marine species and their prey gather, influenced by ocean conditions and geography.

## Contribution

The study links oceanic variability to multispecies hotspot persistence and predator distribution using spatiotemporal models.

## Key findings

- Euphausiids and hake showed variable spatiotemporal hotspot distributions, with a spatial mismatch during the 2014–2016 marine heatwave.
- Two distinct predator assemblages were identified: one in deeper slope regions and another in shallower shelf areas.
- Key ecological areas with multispecies hotspots were found along Vancouver Island, Queen Charlotte Sound, and Haida Gwaii.

## Abstract

Understanding patterns of habitat use across trophic levels and the physical drivers of multispecies aggregations is essential to inform ecosystem‐based management. To achieve this, we quantified the spatial distribution and co‐occurrence of hotspots (defined using the Getis‐Ord statistic) for euphausiids and nine of their commercially important fish and whale predators on the west coast of Canada during summer. We first developed fine‐scale spatiotemporal distribution models of euphausiids and Pacific hake using high‐resolution acoustic data from coast‐wide surveys conducted between 2007 and 2018. We found that the spatiotemporal distribution of hotspots of euphausiids and hake was variable between years with low direct overlap (apart from 2017). The summer of 2015, during the 2014–2016 marine heatwave event, was a particularly anomalous year, as euphausiids and hake showed spatial mismatch in their biomass hotspot distributions. For the other eight predator species, predictions from published species distribution models were used to identify spatial hotspots as an average across years. Co‐occurrence patterns were associated with the depth gradient across the shelf and slope and along the canyon and sea valley systems that characterize the Pacific coast of Canada. One assemblage was associated with the deeper parts (200–1000 m+) of the continental slope (euphausiids, hake, redbanded rockfish, sablefish, Pacific ocean perch, and humpback and fin whales) and a different assemblage (redstripe and yellowtail rockfish, and dogfish) was associated with the shallower shelf regions. Important ecological areas with co‐occurring multispecies hotspots occurred along the west coast of Vancouver Island, the sea valleys of Queen Charlotte Sound, and the northwest coast of Haida Gwaii. Our results identify areas where multiple species aggregate, which can inform better management and hopefully protection of these regions that support complex food webs, commercial species, and large predators, and are therefore essential for overall ecosystem health.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** euphausiid (-), Nitrogen (MESH:D009584), Water (MESH:D014867), oxygen (MESH:D010100)
- **Species:** Sebastes flavidus (yellowtain rockfish, species) [taxon 72076], Rexea solandri (common gemfish, species) [taxon 59946], Squalus suckleyi (Puget Sound dogfish, species) [taxon 7798], Cetacea (cetaceans, infraorder) [taxon 9721], Clupea pallasii (Pacific herring, species) [taxon 30724], Sardina pilchardus (European pilchard, species) [taxon 27697], Rubroshorea almon (species) [taxon 292004], Anoplopoma fimbria (sablefish, species) [taxon 229290], Euphausia pacifica (North Pacific krill, species) [taxon 102976], Sebastes alutus (Pacific ocean perch, species) [taxon 72055], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Sebastes babcocki (redbanded rockfish, species) [taxon 72059], Sebastes marinus (ocean perch, species) [taxon 34821], Chanodichthys dabryi (humpback, species) [taxon 194365], Gadus macrocephalus (Pacific cod, species) [taxon 80720], Sebastes proriger (redstripe rockfish, species) [taxon 394703], Balaenoptera physalus (common rorqual, species) [taxon 9770], Hippoglossus stenolepis (Pacific halibut, species) [taxon 195615], Thysanoessa spinifera (species) [taxon 329973], Megaptera novaeangliae (humpback whale, species) [taxon 9773], Sardinops sagax (South American pilchard, species) [taxon 28381]

## Full text

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## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12796558/full.md

## References

117 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12796558/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12796558