Oxygen gradients affect behaviour of caged Atlantic salmon Salmo salar

Dissolved oxygen (DO) conditions in marine aquaculture cages are heterogeneous and fluctuate rapidly. Here, by temporarily wrapping a tarpaulin around the top 0 to 6 m of a marine cage (~2000 m3), we manipulated DO to evaluate the behavioural response of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar to hypoxia. Video...

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Main Authors: Oldham, T, Dempster, T, Fosse, JO, Oppedal, F
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Inter-Research 2017-03-01
Series:Aquaculture Environment Interactions
Online Access:https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v9/p145-153/
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spelling doaj-ed87a896064945e194eba72cf558c3f32020-11-25T03:11:57ZengInter-ResearchAquaculture Environment Interactions1869-215X1869-75342017-03-01914515310.3354/aei00219Oxygen gradients affect behaviour of caged Atlantic salmon Salmo salarOldham, TDempster, TFosse, JOOppedal, FDissolved oxygen (DO) conditions in marine aquaculture cages are heterogeneous and fluctuate rapidly. Here, by temporarily wrapping a tarpaulin around the top 0 to 6 m of a marine cage (~2000 m3), we manipulated DO to evaluate the behavioural response of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar to hypoxia. Videos were recorded before, during and after DO manipulation at 3 m depth while vertical profiles of temperature, salinity, DO and fish density were continuously measured. The trial was repeated 4 times over a 2 wk period. Temperature and salinity profiles varied little across treatment periods; however, DO saturation was reduced at all depths in all replicate trials during the tarpaulin treatment compared to the periods before or after. In 3 out of 4 trials, swim speeds were 1.5 to 2.7 times slower during the tarpaulin treatment than the before or after periods. Significant changes in vertical distribution of fish density and DO were observed between treatment periods in all replicate trials; salmon swam either above or below the most hypoxic depth layer (59 to 62% DO saturation). In a regression tree analysis, the relative influence of DO in determining fish distribution was 17%, while temperature (39%) and salinity (44%) explained the majority of variation. Our results demonstrate that salmon are capable of modifying their distribution and possibly activity levels in response to intermediate DO levels, but that DO is not a primary driver of behaviour at the saturation levels examined in this study.https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v9/p145-153/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oldham, T
Dempster, T
Fosse, JO
Oppedal, F
spellingShingle Oldham, T
Dempster, T
Fosse, JO
Oppedal, F
Oxygen gradients affect behaviour of caged Atlantic salmon Salmo salar
Aquaculture Environment Interactions
author_facet Oldham, T
Dempster, T
Fosse, JO
Oppedal, F
author_sort Oldham, T
title Oxygen gradients affect behaviour of caged Atlantic salmon Salmo salar
title_short Oxygen gradients affect behaviour of caged Atlantic salmon Salmo salar
title_full Oxygen gradients affect behaviour of caged Atlantic salmon Salmo salar
title_fullStr Oxygen gradients affect behaviour of caged Atlantic salmon Salmo salar
title_full_unstemmed Oxygen gradients affect behaviour of caged Atlantic salmon Salmo salar
title_sort oxygen gradients affect behaviour of caged atlantic salmon salmo salar
publisher Inter-Research
series Aquaculture Environment Interactions
issn 1869-215X
1869-7534
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Dissolved oxygen (DO) conditions in marine aquaculture cages are heterogeneous and fluctuate rapidly. Here, by temporarily wrapping a tarpaulin around the top 0 to 6 m of a marine cage (~2000 m3), we manipulated DO to evaluate the behavioural response of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar to hypoxia. Videos were recorded before, during and after DO manipulation at 3 m depth while vertical profiles of temperature, salinity, DO and fish density were continuously measured. The trial was repeated 4 times over a 2 wk period. Temperature and salinity profiles varied little across treatment periods; however, DO saturation was reduced at all depths in all replicate trials during the tarpaulin treatment compared to the periods before or after. In 3 out of 4 trials, swim speeds were 1.5 to 2.7 times slower during the tarpaulin treatment than the before or after periods. Significant changes in vertical distribution of fish density and DO were observed between treatment periods in all replicate trials; salmon swam either above or below the most hypoxic depth layer (59 to 62% DO saturation). In a regression tree analysis, the relative influence of DO in determining fish distribution was 17%, while temperature (39%) and salinity (44%) explained the majority of variation. Our results demonstrate that salmon are capable of modifying their distribution and possibly activity levels in response to intermediate DO levels, but that DO is not a primary driver of behaviour at the saturation levels examined in this study.
url https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v9/p145-153/
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AT dempstert oxygengradientsaffectbehaviourofcagedatlanticsalmonsalmosalar
AT fossejo oxygengradientsaffectbehaviourofcagedatlanticsalmonsalmosalar
AT oppedalf oxygengradientsaffectbehaviourofcagedatlanticsalmonsalmosalar
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