The hypoxia avoidance behaviour of juvenile Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua L.) depends on the provision and pressure level of an O2 refuge

The frequency of low O_{2} (hypoxia) has increased in coastal marine areas but how fish avoid deleterious water masses is not yet clear. To assess whether the presence and oxygen pressure (PO_{2}) level of an O_{2} refuge affects the hypoxia avoidance behaviour of fish, individual Atlantic cod (Gadu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Biology
Main Authors: Herbert, NA, Skjæraasen, JE, Nilsen, T, Salvanes, AGV, Steffensen, JF
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Springer 2011
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2292/16291
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-010-1601-7
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Summary:The frequency of low O_{2} (hypoxia) has increased in coastal marine areas but how fish avoid deleterious water masses is not yet clear. To assess whether the presence and oxygen pressure (PO_{2}) level of an O_{2} refuge affects the hypoxia avoidance behaviour of fish, individual Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua L.) were exposed to a range of O_{2} choices in a 2-way choice chamber at 11.4°C over two different experiments. Cod in the first experiment were allowed access to a fixed O_{2} refuge (fully air-saturated seawater) whilst oxygen pressure (PO_{2}) on the other side was reduced in steps to a critically low level, i.e. 4.3 kPa—a point where cod can no longer regulate O_{2} consumption. Under these conditions, cod did not avoid any level of hypoxia and fish swimming speed also remained unchanged. In contrast, strong avoidance reactions were exhibited in a second experiment when fish were again exposed to 4.3 kPa but the safety, i.e. (PO_{2}), of the refuge was reduced. Fish not only spent less time at 4.3 kPa as a result of fewer sampling visits but they also swam at considerably slower speeds. The presence of an avoidance response was thus strongly related to refuge (PO_{2}) and it is unlikely that cod, and possibly other fish species, would enter low O_{2} to feed in the wild if a sufficiently safe O_{2} refuge was not available. It is therefore hypothesized that the feeding range of fish may be heavily compressed if hypoxia expands and intensifies in future years.