Recommendations on size and position of surgically and gastrically implanted electronic tags in European silver eel

Abstract Background Information on European silver eel Anguilla anguilla anatomy was collected to gain information on limitations on size and placement of electronic tags. Findings To reduce the eel’s ability to bite its own sutures, it may be an advantage to make surgical incisions close to the hea...

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Main Authors: Økland, Finn, Thorstad, Eva B
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central Ltd. 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.animalbiotelemetry.com/content/1/1/6
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftbiomed:oai:biomedcentral.com:2050-3385-1-6 2023-05-15T13:27:56+02:00 Recommendations on size and position of surgically and gastrically implanted electronic tags in European silver eel Økland, Finn Thorstad, Eva B 2013-05-06 http://www.animalbiotelemetry.com/content/1/1/6 en eng BioMed Central Ltd. http://www.animalbiotelemetry.com/content/1/1/6 Copyright 2013 Økland and Thorstad; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. Intraperitoneal implantation Intragastric insertion Tagging Transmitter Telemetry Tagging effect Short communication 2013 ftbiomed 2013-05-19T00:10:34Z Abstract Background Information on European silver eel Anguilla anguilla anatomy was collected to gain information on limitations on size and placement of electronic tags. Findings To reduce the eel’s ability to bite its own sutures, it may be an advantage to make surgical incisions close to the head, but this increases the risk of cutting the liver. Recommended placement of an incision was slightly further from the head than one-fourth of the fish’s body length ( L T ) to avoid damaging the liver. Long, flexible tags comprising various components can be adjusted to the narrow body cavity and undulating movements of eels. There was space for surgically implanting a 100 mm long tag (11 mm in diameter) in the body cavity of eels with L T ≥380 mm. During gastric tagging, tag length is limited by stomach length. Silver eels with L T 380 to 998 mm had stomach lengths of 47 to 185 mm, indicating that there was space for short gastric tags in the smallest eels, but that there was space for relatively long tags in larger eels. The distance from the snout to the start of the stomach constituted 15 to 23% of L T , indicating how far the transmitter should be inserted during tagging. Conclusion This information aids the development of tags and tagging methods that consider the unique morphological and behavioral features of eels. Other/Unknown Material Anguilla anguilla BioMed Central
institution Open Polar
collection BioMed Central
op_collection_id ftbiomed
language English
topic Intraperitoneal implantation
Intragastric insertion
Tagging
Transmitter
Telemetry
Tagging effect
spellingShingle Intraperitoneal implantation
Intragastric insertion
Tagging
Transmitter
Telemetry
Tagging effect
Økland, Finn
Thorstad, Eva B
Recommendations on size and position of surgically and gastrically implanted electronic tags in European silver eel
topic_facet Intraperitoneal implantation
Intragastric insertion
Tagging
Transmitter
Telemetry
Tagging effect
description Abstract Background Information on European silver eel Anguilla anguilla anatomy was collected to gain information on limitations on size and placement of electronic tags. Findings To reduce the eel’s ability to bite its own sutures, it may be an advantage to make surgical incisions close to the head, but this increases the risk of cutting the liver. Recommended placement of an incision was slightly further from the head than one-fourth of the fish’s body length ( L T ) to avoid damaging the liver. Long, flexible tags comprising various components can be adjusted to the narrow body cavity and undulating movements of eels. There was space for surgically implanting a 100 mm long tag (11 mm in diameter) in the body cavity of eels with L T ≥380 mm. During gastric tagging, tag length is limited by stomach length. Silver eels with L T 380 to 998 mm had stomach lengths of 47 to 185 mm, indicating that there was space for short gastric tags in the smallest eels, but that there was space for relatively long tags in larger eels. The distance from the snout to the start of the stomach constituted 15 to 23% of L T , indicating how far the transmitter should be inserted during tagging. Conclusion This information aids the development of tags and tagging methods that consider the unique morphological and behavioral features of eels.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Økland, Finn
Thorstad, Eva B
author_facet Økland, Finn
Thorstad, Eva B
author_sort Økland, Finn
title Recommendations on size and position of surgically and gastrically implanted electronic tags in European silver eel
title_short Recommendations on size and position of surgically and gastrically implanted electronic tags in European silver eel
title_full Recommendations on size and position of surgically and gastrically implanted electronic tags in European silver eel
title_fullStr Recommendations on size and position of surgically and gastrically implanted electronic tags in European silver eel
title_full_unstemmed Recommendations on size and position of surgically and gastrically implanted electronic tags in European silver eel
title_sort recommendations on size and position of surgically and gastrically implanted electronic tags in european silver eel
publisher BioMed Central Ltd.
publishDate 2013
url http://www.animalbiotelemetry.com/content/1/1/6
genre Anguilla anguilla
genre_facet Anguilla anguilla
op_relation http://www.animalbiotelemetry.com/content/1/1/6
op_rights Copyright 2013 Økland and Thorstad; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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