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Map of the Arctic and Antarctic (in grey), based on Møller et al. (2005).

Map of the Arctic and Antarctic (in grey), based on Møller et al. (2005).

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Context 1
... yellow croaker (Larimichthys polyactis) Simulations using the two hypothetical scenarios of increase in global sea water temperature predicted that distributions of the Small yellow croaker would shift northward in 30 years ( Figure 13, 14). Both the centroid and latitudinal range limits of the distribution shifted in all positive warming scenarios. ...
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... degree of range shift also differs between coast and offshore regions. Under a stronger warming scenario (scenario 2), the northern range limit shifted by 5 o latitude while the centroid of the distribution shifted by around 3 o northward ( Figure 14). Nassau grouper (Epinephelus striatus) Similar patterns of range shift were observed for Nassau grouper, which ranges across the equator (Figure 15 & 16). ...
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... latitudinal range of its annual distribution extends from 20°N to 35°S. Our model predicts that the southern boundary shifts from Rio Grande do Sul to northern coast of Santa Catarina region, Brazil (28°S) in northern summer (Figure 4). In northern winter, the northern boundary shifts from Belize to Nicaragua (13°N). ...
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... default values of a and b are 0.5 and 0.3, respectively. Since temperature-gradient tends to be steeper at mid-latitude (around 40 o N/S), the calculated latitude-relative abundance distributions will also skewed towards the mid-latitudinal zone (Figure 4). For example, given the L U and L L of Altantic cod (78 o and 35 o N), the calculated S is 0.68 and the peak of the triangular distribution is at 48.7 o N (see distribution c in Figure 4). ...
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... temperature-gradient tends to be steeper at mid-latitude (around 40 o N/S), the calculated latitude-relative abundance distributions will also skewed towards the mid-latitudinal zone (Figure 4). For example, given the L U and L L of Altantic cod (78 o and 35 o N), the calculated S is 0.68 and the peak of the triangular distribution is at 48.7 o N (see distribution c in Figure 4). This algorithm applies to distribution ranges that cover either the northern or southern hemisphere only, or across the equator with a bimodal latitudinal distribution. ...

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