Wild and farmed burbot Lota lota: differences in energy consumption and behavior during the spawning season

Farmed fish released in a native environment can display different spawning behaviour compared to their wild conspecifics. In our study, farmed and wild burbot, a species recently introduced for aquacultural production, were equipped with electromyogram (EMG) radio tags. EMG biotelemetry allows a de...

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Main Authors: O Slavík, P Horký
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Inter-Research 2021-03-01
Series:Aquaculture Environment Interactions
Online Access:https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v13/p51-63/
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spelling doaj-bd479292906c45b08eb72257817797ed2021-07-22T08:59:37ZengInter-ResearchAquaculture Environment Interactions1869-215X1869-75342021-03-0113516310.3354/aei00389Wild and farmed burbot Lota lota: differences in energy consumption and behavior during the spawning seasonO Slavík0P Horký1Department of Zoology and Fisheries, Faculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources, Czech University of Life Sciences, Prague, Kamýcká 129, 165 00 Prague 6, Czech RepublicDepartment of Zoology and Fisheries, Faculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources, Czech University of Life Sciences, Prague, Kamýcká 129, 165 00 Prague 6, Czech RepublicFarmed fish released in a native environment can display different spawning behaviour compared to their wild conspecifics. In our study, farmed and wild burbot, a species recently introduced for aquacultural production, were equipped with electromyogram (EMG) radio tags. EMG biotelemetry allows a description of the spatial distribution of fish together with simultaneous measurements of individual energy consumption. Farmed burbot were released into the wild to simulate stocking or hatchery escape and were observed over a nocturnal phase during November to January. The observational period was assumed to cover the whole spawning season, including an expected peak of spawning activity determined according to egg production by naturally spawning burbot in an experimental seminatural river channel. We detected increased energy consumption and lower movement activity at the time of expected peak spawning for wild burbot only. Across the whole spawning season, farmed females showed lower movement activity and energy consumption than wild females, whereas the opposite results were found for farmed males. Farmed and wild fish kept larger distances between each other than the individuals within a group (farmed and wild) across the whole spawning season. The closest positions occurred between males and females in the wild group, while for farmed fish, the closest position was found within the same sex. Sexually conditioned energy consumption and spatial distribution differed between wild and farmed fish.https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v13/p51-63/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author O Slavík
P Horký
spellingShingle O Slavík
P Horký
Wild and farmed burbot Lota lota: differences in energy consumption and behavior during the spawning season
Aquaculture Environment Interactions
author_facet O Slavík
P Horký
author_sort O Slavík
title Wild and farmed burbot Lota lota: differences in energy consumption and behavior during the spawning season
title_short Wild and farmed burbot Lota lota: differences in energy consumption and behavior during the spawning season
title_full Wild and farmed burbot Lota lota: differences in energy consumption and behavior during the spawning season
title_fullStr Wild and farmed burbot Lota lota: differences in energy consumption and behavior during the spawning season
title_full_unstemmed Wild and farmed burbot Lota lota: differences in energy consumption and behavior during the spawning season
title_sort wild and farmed burbot lota lota: differences in energy consumption and behavior during the spawning season
publisher Inter-Research
series Aquaculture Environment Interactions
issn 1869-215X
1869-7534
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Farmed fish released in a native environment can display different spawning behaviour compared to their wild conspecifics. In our study, farmed and wild burbot, a species recently introduced for aquacultural production, were equipped with electromyogram (EMG) radio tags. EMG biotelemetry allows a description of the spatial distribution of fish together with simultaneous measurements of individual energy consumption. Farmed burbot were released into the wild to simulate stocking or hatchery escape and were observed over a nocturnal phase during November to January. The observational period was assumed to cover the whole spawning season, including an expected peak of spawning activity determined according to egg production by naturally spawning burbot in an experimental seminatural river channel. We detected increased energy consumption and lower movement activity at the time of expected peak spawning for wild burbot only. Across the whole spawning season, farmed females showed lower movement activity and energy consumption than wild females, whereas the opposite results were found for farmed males. Farmed and wild fish kept larger distances between each other than the individuals within a group (farmed and wild) across the whole spawning season. The closest positions occurred between males and females in the wild group, while for farmed fish, the closest position was found within the same sex. Sexually conditioned energy consumption and spatial distribution differed between wild and farmed fish.
url https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v13/p51-63/
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