Life under pressure: insights from electronic data-storage tags into cod swimbladder function

The behavioural response of cod (Gadus morhua) to sudden pressure reductions was investigated in a large electronic-tagging exper-iment using data collected from 141 cod tagged in five different areas of the Northeast Atlantic. More than 40 % of cod exhibited a characteristic equilibration behaviour...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jeroen Van Der Kooij, David Righton, Espen Str, Kathrine Michalsen, Vilhjalmur Thorsteinsson, Francis C. Neat, Stefan Neuenfeldt
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
cod
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.586.289
http://icesjms.oxfordjournals.org/content/64/7/1293.full.pdf
Description
Summary:The behavioural response of cod (Gadus morhua) to sudden pressure reductions was investigated in a large electronic-tagging exper-iment using data collected from 141 cod tagged in five different areas of the Northeast Atlantic. More than 40 % of cod exhibited a characteristic equilibration behaviour after a rapid pressure reduction caused either by capture before tagging, or by pressure reduction during a rapid ascent from the seabed, or when migrating to deeper water. The equilibration allowed the cod to regain demersal residence. The rate of descent averaged 10 m d21 (ranging from 2 to 23 m d21) over periods of less than a day to 1 month. Descent rates for cod on the Icelandic shelf were inversely related to fish length, i.e. smaller fish descended more rapidly, find-ings consistent with results achieved in the past under laboratory conditions. Modelling of swimbladder volume during equilibration suggested that cod were negatively buoyant for most of the time. The results imply that swimbladder functionality is retained after the probable barotrauma that would follow a large and rapid ascent, and that rates of gas exchange into the swimbladder may be naturally variable. These findings have implications for assumptions on discard mortality, the interpretation of cod behaviour, and its impact on