Altered search speed and growth: social versus independent foraging in two pelagic juvenile fishes

Prior studies have demonstrated that juvenile walleye pollock Theragra chalcogramma forage socially in schools for spatially and temporally clumped food, but forage more independently for spatially and temporally dispersed food. One advantage of social foraging is that fish in schools may be able to...

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Main Authors: Ryer, Clifford H., Olla, Bori L.
Other Authors: Hatfield Marine Science Center
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
unknown
Published: Inter-Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/8k71nh583
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spelling ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:8k71nh583 2024-09-15T18:39:04+00:00 Altered search speed and growth: social versus independent foraging in two pelagic juvenile fishes Ryer, Clifford H. Olla, Bori L. Hatfield Marine Science Center https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/8k71nh583 English [eng] eng unknown Inter-Research https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/8k71nh583 Copyright Not Evaluated Article ftoregonstate 2024-07-22T18:06:05Z Prior studies have demonstrated that juvenile walleye pollock Theragra chalcogramma forage socially in schools for spatially and temporally clumped food, but forage more independently for spatially and temporally dispersed food. One advantage of social foraging is that fish in schools may be able to locate more food clumps than fish foraging individually. However, data also indicate that walleye pollock swim faster when foraging socially. We conducted laboratory experiments to evaluate the effect of food distribution upon the energetic foraging costs incurred by juvenile walleye pollock and sablefish Anaplopoma fimbria. We predicted that when given identical rations, fish receiving clumped food would swim faster, expending more energy, and therefore grow more slowly than fish receiving dispersed food. After 2 wk under these 2 foraging regimes, juvenile walleye pollock receiving clumped food swam 50 % faster, but experienced 19 % lower growth, than walleye pollock receiving dispersed food. Sablefish demonstrated only a weak swim speed response, with no difference in growth between food distributions. Our results demonstrate that although social foraging may increase encounter rates with food, in some species there may also be an energetic cost for this behavior, which will have an influence upon energetic efficiency, potentially affecting growth and survival. Keywords: Swimming, Growth, Foraging strategy, Bioenergetics, Milkshake effect, Shoaling Article in Journal/Newspaper Theragra chalcogramma ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
institution Open Polar
collection ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
op_collection_id ftoregonstate
language English
unknown
description Prior studies have demonstrated that juvenile walleye pollock Theragra chalcogramma forage socially in schools for spatially and temporally clumped food, but forage more independently for spatially and temporally dispersed food. One advantage of social foraging is that fish in schools may be able to locate more food clumps than fish foraging individually. However, data also indicate that walleye pollock swim faster when foraging socially. We conducted laboratory experiments to evaluate the effect of food distribution upon the energetic foraging costs incurred by juvenile walleye pollock and sablefish Anaplopoma fimbria. We predicted that when given identical rations, fish receiving clumped food would swim faster, expending more energy, and therefore grow more slowly than fish receiving dispersed food. After 2 wk under these 2 foraging regimes, juvenile walleye pollock receiving clumped food swam 50 % faster, but experienced 19 % lower growth, than walleye pollock receiving dispersed food. Sablefish demonstrated only a weak swim speed response, with no difference in growth between food distributions. Our results demonstrate that although social foraging may increase encounter rates with food, in some species there may also be an energetic cost for this behavior, which will have an influence upon energetic efficiency, potentially affecting growth and survival. Keywords: Swimming, Growth, Foraging strategy, Bioenergetics, Milkshake effect, Shoaling
author2 Hatfield Marine Science Center
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ryer, Clifford H.
Olla, Bori L.
spellingShingle Ryer, Clifford H.
Olla, Bori L.
Altered search speed and growth: social versus independent foraging in two pelagic juvenile fishes
author_facet Ryer, Clifford H.
Olla, Bori L.
author_sort Ryer, Clifford H.
title Altered search speed and growth: social versus independent foraging in two pelagic juvenile fishes
title_short Altered search speed and growth: social versus independent foraging in two pelagic juvenile fishes
title_full Altered search speed and growth: social versus independent foraging in two pelagic juvenile fishes
title_fullStr Altered search speed and growth: social versus independent foraging in two pelagic juvenile fishes
title_full_unstemmed Altered search speed and growth: social versus independent foraging in two pelagic juvenile fishes
title_sort altered search speed and growth: social versus independent foraging in two pelagic juvenile fishes
publisher Inter-Research
url https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/8k71nh583
genre Theragra chalcogramma
genre_facet Theragra chalcogramma
op_relation https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/8k71nh583
op_rights Copyright Not Evaluated
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