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Deterring the Movement of an Invasive Fish: Individual Variation in Common Carp Responses to Acoustic and Stroboscopic Stimuli

Authors :
Bzonek, P. A.
Edwards, P. D.
Hasler, C. T.
Suski, C. D.
Boonstra, R.
Mandrak, N. E.
Source :
Transactions of the American Fisheries Society; January 2022, Vol. 151 Issue: 1 p112-123, 12p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Biological invasions erode ecosystem functioning and occur more frequently in freshwater ecosystems than in terrestrial environments. Nonphysical deterrents may be used to limit invasive fish dispersal, without altering the streamflow or connectivity of a watershed. Little is currently known about how behavioral variation among individuals may affect the efficacy of a deterrent, although such variation has been shown to affect fish dispersal in other contexts, such as range expansion. Furthermore, deterrent effectiveness is rarely tested when fish are motivated to disperse. Across a control, CO2, and CO2+ deterrent treatment, we quantified the avoidance response of invasive Common Carp Cyprinus carpioto a combined acoustic‐stroboscopic deterrent. In the CO2treatment, we motivated individuals to enter a novel environment by degrading the home chamber of a choice arena with a continuous infusion of CO2. In the CO2+ deterrent treatment we introduced acoustic and stroboscopic stimuli to delay the departure of the fish and evaluate the efficacy of the deterrent. Finally, we tested a subset of the fish multiple times to determine whether they consistently responded to the same concentration of CO2. We found that the acoustic and stroboscopic deterrent could detain the fish in an increasingly unfavorable environment. Common Carp took only 195 and 131 s, respectively, to swim between the chambers during the control and CO2treatment but took an average of 596 s in the CO2+ deterrent treatment. High CO2concentrations in the CO2+ deterrent treatment led to most fish eventually dispersing toward the deterrent stimuli. Avoidance behavior varied widely within the CO2+ deterrent treatment, and Common Carp expressed repeatable differences in the tank‐inflow CO2concentrations that were observed during chamber departure. Such interindividual variation in deterrent avoidance indicates that some individuals within a given species are more likely to move past a deterrent than others.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00028487 and 15488659
Volume :
151
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs58783206
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/tafs.10341