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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Activity assessment of individual fish in a sea-cage could provide valuable insights into
the behavior, but also physiological well-being and resilience, of the fish population in the
cage. Acceleration can be monitored continuously with internal acoustic transmitter tags
and is generally applied as a real-time proxy for activity. The objective of this study was
to investigate the activity patterns of Gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata) by transmitter
tags in a sea-cage and analyze correlations with water temperature, fish size and tissue
weights. Experimental fish (N = 300) were transferred to an experimental sea-cage of
which thirty fish (Standard Length SL = 18.3 1.7 cm; Body Weight BW = 174 39 g)
were implanted with accelerometer tags. Accelerations were monitored for a period of
6 weeks (Nov.–Dec.) and were analyzed over the 6 weeks and 24 h of the day. At the end
of the experimental period, tagged fish were again measured, weighed and dissected
for tissue and filet weights, and correlations with accelerations were analyzed. Daily
rhythms in accelerations under the experimental conditions were characterized by more
active periods from 6 to 14 h and 18 to 0 h and less active periods from 0 to 6 h and
14 to 18 h. This W-shaped pattern remained over the experimental weeks, even with
diurnal accelerations decreasing which was correlated to the dropping temperature. The
increase in activity was not during, but just before feeding indicating food-anticipatory
activity. Activity patterning can be useful for timing feeding events at the start of active
periods, in this study between 6 and 11 h, and between 18 and 22 h. Acceleration was
negatively correlated to heart and mesenteric fat mass, which was the exact contrary
of our expectations for sustainedly swimming seabream. These results suggest that
acceleration is a proxy for unsteady swimming activity only and research is required into
the accelerations occurring during sustained swimming of seabream at various speeds.
Description
Keywords
Aquaculture Swimming behavior Telemetry Activity monitoring Acoustic transmitter tags
Citation
Publisher
Frontiers Media