Sentinels in Salmon Aquaculture: Heart Rates Across Seasons and During Crowding Events

Advances in tag technology now make it possible to monitor the behavior of small groups of individual fish as bioindicators of population wellbeing in commercial aquaculture settings. For example, tags may detect unusual patterns in fish heart rate, which could serve as an early indicator of whether...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: F Warren-Myers, M Hvas, T Vågseth, Tim Dempster, F Oppedal
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10779/DRO/DU:24602424.v3
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Sentinels_in_Salmon_Aquaculture_Heart_Rates_Across_Seasons_and_During_Crowding_Events/24602424
id ftdeakinunifig:oai:figshare.com:article/24602424
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdeakinunifig:oai:figshare.com:article/24602424 2024-09-09T19:30:53+00:00 Sentinels in Salmon Aquaculture: Heart Rates Across Seasons and During Crowding Events F Warren-Myers M Hvas T Vågseth Tim Dempster F Oppedal 2021-11-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/10779/DRO/DU:24602424.v3 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Sentinels_in_Salmon_Aquaculture_Heart_Rates_Across_Seasons_and_During_Crowding_Events/24602424 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/10779/DRO/DU:24602424.v3 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Sentinels_in_Salmon_Aquaculture_Heart_Rates_Across_Seasons_and_During_Crowding_Events/24602424 CC BY 4.0 Biological sciences Biochemistry and cell biology Zoology Biomedical and clinical sciences Medical physiology Psychology data storage tags diurnal rhythm fish welfare sea cage stress Text Journal contribution 2021 ftdeakinunifig 2024-06-20T00:31:11Z Advances in tag technology now make it possible to monitor the behavior of small groups of individual fish as bioindicators of population wellbeing in commercial aquaculture settings. For example, tags may detect unusual patterns in fish heart rate, which could serve as an early indicator of whether fish health or welfare is becoming compromised. Here, we investigated the use of commercially available heart rate biologgers implanted into 24 Atlantic salmon weighing 3.6 ± 0.8 kg (mean ± SD) to monitor fish over 5 months in a standard 12 m × 12 m square sea cage containing ∼6,000 conspecifics. Post tagging, fish established a diurnal heart rate rhythm within 24 h, which stabilized after 4 days. Whilst the registered tagged fish mortality over the trial period was 0%, only 75% of tagged fish were recaptured at harvest, resulting in an unexplained tag loss rate of 25%. After 5 months, tagged fish were approximately 20% lighter and 8% shorter, but of the similar condition when compared to untagged fish. Distinct diurnal heart rate patterns were observed and changed with seasonal day length of natural illumination. Fish exhibited lower heart rates at night [winter 39 ± 0.2 beats per min (bpm), spring 37 ± 0.2 bpm, summer 43 ± 0.3 bpm, mean ± SE] than during the day (winter 50 ± 0.3 bpm, spring 48 ± 0.2 bpm, summer 49 ± 0.2 bpm) with the difference between night and day heart rates near half during the summer (6 bpm) compared to winter and spring (both 11 bpm). When fish experienced moderate and severe crowding events in early summer, the highest hourly heart rates reached 60 ± 2.5 bpm and 72 ± 2.4 bpm, respectively, on the day of crowding. Here, if the negative sublethal effects on fish that carry tags (e.g., growth rate) can be substantially reduced, the ability to monitor diurnal heart rate patterns across seasons and detect changes during crowding events, and using heart rate biologgers could be a useful warning mechanism for detecting sudden changes in fish behavior in sea cages. Article in Journal/Newspaper Atlantic salmon DRO - Deakin Research Online
institution Open Polar
collection DRO - Deakin Research Online
op_collection_id ftdeakinunifig
language unknown
topic Biological sciences
Biochemistry and cell biology
Zoology
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Medical physiology
Psychology
data storage tags
diurnal rhythm
fish welfare
sea cage
stress
spellingShingle Biological sciences
Biochemistry and cell biology
Zoology
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Medical physiology
Psychology
data storage tags
diurnal rhythm
fish welfare
sea cage
stress
F Warren-Myers
M Hvas
T Vågseth
Tim Dempster
F Oppedal
Sentinels in Salmon Aquaculture: Heart Rates Across Seasons and During Crowding Events
topic_facet Biological sciences
Biochemistry and cell biology
Zoology
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Medical physiology
Psychology
data storage tags
diurnal rhythm
fish welfare
sea cage
stress
description Advances in tag technology now make it possible to monitor the behavior of small groups of individual fish as bioindicators of population wellbeing in commercial aquaculture settings. For example, tags may detect unusual patterns in fish heart rate, which could serve as an early indicator of whether fish health or welfare is becoming compromised. Here, we investigated the use of commercially available heart rate biologgers implanted into 24 Atlantic salmon weighing 3.6 ± 0.8 kg (mean ± SD) to monitor fish over 5 months in a standard 12 m × 12 m square sea cage containing ∼6,000 conspecifics. Post tagging, fish established a diurnal heart rate rhythm within 24 h, which stabilized after 4 days. Whilst the registered tagged fish mortality over the trial period was 0%, only 75% of tagged fish were recaptured at harvest, resulting in an unexplained tag loss rate of 25%. After 5 months, tagged fish were approximately 20% lighter and 8% shorter, but of the similar condition when compared to untagged fish. Distinct diurnal heart rate patterns were observed and changed with seasonal day length of natural illumination. Fish exhibited lower heart rates at night [winter 39 ± 0.2 beats per min (bpm), spring 37 ± 0.2 bpm, summer 43 ± 0.3 bpm, mean ± SE] than during the day (winter 50 ± 0.3 bpm, spring 48 ± 0.2 bpm, summer 49 ± 0.2 bpm) with the difference between night and day heart rates near half during the summer (6 bpm) compared to winter and spring (both 11 bpm). When fish experienced moderate and severe crowding events in early summer, the highest hourly heart rates reached 60 ± 2.5 bpm and 72 ± 2.4 bpm, respectively, on the day of crowding. Here, if the negative sublethal effects on fish that carry tags (e.g., growth rate) can be substantially reduced, the ability to monitor diurnal heart rate patterns across seasons and detect changes during crowding events, and using heart rate biologgers could be a useful warning mechanism for detecting sudden changes in fish behavior in sea cages.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author F Warren-Myers
M Hvas
T Vågseth
Tim Dempster
F Oppedal
author_facet F Warren-Myers
M Hvas
T Vågseth
Tim Dempster
F Oppedal
author_sort F Warren-Myers
title Sentinels in Salmon Aquaculture: Heart Rates Across Seasons and During Crowding Events
title_short Sentinels in Salmon Aquaculture: Heart Rates Across Seasons and During Crowding Events
title_full Sentinels in Salmon Aquaculture: Heart Rates Across Seasons and During Crowding Events
title_fullStr Sentinels in Salmon Aquaculture: Heart Rates Across Seasons and During Crowding Events
title_full_unstemmed Sentinels in Salmon Aquaculture: Heart Rates Across Seasons and During Crowding Events
title_sort sentinels in salmon aquaculture: heart rates across seasons and during crowding events
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/10779/DRO/DU:24602424.v3
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Sentinels_in_Salmon_Aquaculture_Heart_Rates_Across_Seasons_and_During_Crowding_Events/24602424
genre Atlantic salmon
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10779/DRO/DU:24602424.v3
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Sentinels_in_Salmon_Aquaculture_Heart_Rates_Across_Seasons_and_During_Crowding_Events/24602424
op_rights CC BY 4.0
_version_ 1809899851335335936