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Peter Gaube

Senior Principal Oceanographer

Email

pgaube@uw.edu

Phone

206-616-0611

Education

B.A. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, 2003

M.S. Physical Oceanography, Nova Southeastern University, 2007

Ph.D. Oceanography, Oregon State University, 2012

Peter Gaube's Website

http://gaubelab.org

Videos

PACE: Identifying Phytoplankton Communities from Space

APL-UW oceanographers Ali Chase and Peter Gaube traveled to Cape Canaveral to watch the launch of PACE — the Plankton Aerosol Cloud and Ocean Ecosystem mission. This NASA satellite is observing the Earth's oceans and atmosphere every day globally.

11 Apr 2024

Tracking Swordfish for Ocean Research

Scientists from the UW and WHOI are teaming with swordfish experts and Wildlife Computers to catch, tag, and track the location and diving depth of swordfish. These apex predators are an ideal oceanographic platform to study the ocean twilight zone, home to the largest biomass of fish on the planet.

4 Nov 2019

White Sharks as Oceanographic Research Platforms

Shark swimming paths and feeding behaviors are giving Peter Gaube and his colleagues some new insights to the annual phytoplankton bloom cycle in the North Atlantic. They are at sea during the month of May on the NAAMES project — the North Atlantic Aerosol and Marine Ecosystem Study. The sharks, tagged with satellite tracking sensors, swim and dive deeply in ocean eddies, preferring those that are warmer and have lower primary production. Gaube's expertise is oceanic mesoscale eddies and meanders, the spinning masses of water 10–100 km across that make up the ocean's weather and impact the ecosystem. A goal of NAAMES is to characterize the phytoplankton, zooplankton, and fish inside and outside mesoscale eddies to probe mechanistic physical–biological interactions.

3 May 2016

Publications

2000-present and while at APL-UW

Pelagic sharks target long-lived, retentive anticyclonic eddies in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean

Braun, C.D., and 12 others including P. Gaube, "Pelagic sharks target long-lived, retentive anticyclonic eddies in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean," Limnol. Oceanogr., EOR, doi:10.1002/lno.70260, 2025.

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20 Nov 2025

Open ocean ecosystems represent the largest habitat on Earth and are highly dynamic in time and space. Mesoscale eddies are a primary driver of this variability and serve a key structural role in ocean ecosystems. Eddies modulate marine biodiversity beyond their impacts on plankton, influencing many ecologically and commercially important predators that may preferentially occupy anticyclonic eddies. However, how animal-eddy interactions scale across predator species and the mechanistic drivers of these relationships remain an area of active research. We integrated satellite tracking data for sharks with observations of mesoscale eddies to determine how four shark species interact with eddies in the Gulf Stream region. Based on over 24,000 tracking days, we found that blue, white, and shortfin mako sharks selected for the cores of anticyclones while the use of eddies by tiger sharks was less conspicuous. Some particularly large and long-lived anticyclones were occupied by tagged sharks for multiple weeks suggesting that these eddies may serve as hotspots for pelagic predators.

Movement ecology of a deep-pelagic mesopredator, the bigscale pomfret: Implications for pelagic food web connectivity and fishery susceptibility

Arostegui, M.C., D. Mears, P. Gaube, and C.D. Braun, "Movement ecology of a deep-pelagic mesopredator, the bigscale pomfret: Implications for pelagic food web connectivity and fishery susceptibility," Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser., 769, 183-196, doi:10.3354/meps14934, 2025.

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18 Sep 2025

The bigscale pomfret Taractichthys longipinnis is assumed to be a deep-pelagic fish that occurs primarily below 200 m but above the seafloor during the daytime. However, the lack of movement data for this and related species precludes precise ecological classification. Here, we used satellite telemetry to overcome historical methodological limitations to studying deep-pelagic fishes and enable direct characterization of the movement ecology of this large teleost. Time-depth data from pop-up satellite archival transmitting tags unambiguously identified bigscale pomfret as a deep-pelagic species that occupies the ocean twilight zone, with all individuals consistently undergoing diel vertical migration on a daily basis. Tagged pomfret exhibited biome-specific degrees of adherence to a light comfort zone during these vertical movements, ranging hundreds of meters, resulting in marked changes in vertical habitat use when crossing from the Slope Sea into the oligotrophic Sargasso Sea, where there is increased light penetration. This biome-level variation in the observed niche of bigscale pomfret highlights the role of water optical clarity in potentially restructuring pelagic food web interactions and modulating fishery bycatch risk.

Argos satellite transmitters enable billfish research at finer scales

Arostegui, M.C., P. Gaube, A. Vo, S.R. Thorrold, and C.D. Braun, "Argos satellite transmitters enable billfish research at finer scales," ICES J. Mar. Sci., 82, doi:10.1093/icesjms/fsaf001, 2025.

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14 Jan 2025

Satellite transmitters that provide Doppler-based locations and telemeter data via the Argos satellite system have revealed a wealth of information on the movement ecology of diverse fauna such as marine mammals, turtles, and sharks. In contrast, satellite telemetry studies of bony fishes have almost exclusively relied on pop-up satellite archival tags (PSATs) that use light-based geolocation to estimate movements. However, track reconstructions based on light and other sensor data transmitted by PSATs exhibit positional error that is orders of magnitude higher than those from Argos Doppler-based locations, effectively limiting our understanding of bony fish movement ecology to coarse scales. Although PSATs continue to be the technological workhorse of billfish research, with more than 1000 data records published to date, a handful of pioneering studies have tried using tags capable of providing Argos Doppler-based locations to better understand these taxa. We assess the applicability of Argos satellite transmitters to study billfish in the context of their depth distribution and by comparing alternative tag attachment strategies and form factors. We present two case studies that highlight how these data can explicitly be used for fine-scale ecological and oceanographic research. This work culminates with the introduction of a new Smart Position and Temperature (SPOT) transmitting tag designed specifically for billfish and other pelagic fishes that has the potential to open new avenues of research, revealing dimensions of behavior that previously could not be investigated.

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In The News

Seawater synergy

DEIXIS Magazine, Wudan Yan

UW Oceanography graduate student Carlyn Schmidgall, advised by Peter Gaube and LuAnne Thompson, is profiled. Her research zeroes in on how Pacific water entering through Bering Strait carries heat into the Arctic and where that heat goes, where it's stored, and how it impacts the ice conditions and atmosphere.

1 Nov 2025

Great white sharks are hanging out in the twilight zone and scientists don't know why

Live Science, Carys Matthews

In a new study, data from 12 species of large predatory fish, including sharks, billfish and tunas showed they regularly spent time in the mesopelagic zone — also known as the twilight zone — which stretches between the depths of 200 to 1,000 m.

20 Nov 2023

Unveiling the mysteries: New insights on why marine predators dive into the dark, deep sea

SciTechDaily, WHOI

Data from over 300 tags on large marine predators, along with shipboard sonar, point to the ecological importance of the ocean’s twilight zone.

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12 Nov 2023

A new study demonstrates that large predatory fishes like sharks, tunas, and billfish make a surprising number of visits to the deep ocean—particularly the mesopelagic zone, which is found between 200 to 1,000 meters below the surface. This area, also called the ocean’s twilight zone, has been overlooked as critical habitat for large predator species, according to the study. The paper was published on November 6 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

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Acoustics Air-Sea Interaction & Remote Sensing Center for Environmental & Information Systems Center for Industrial & Medical Ultrasound Electronic & Photonic Systems Ocean Engineering Ocean Physics Polar Science Center
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