Behavioral experiments for one-way trafficking and individual monitoring of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar

The following experiments were set up to imitate the behavior of entering a feeding station, enabling individual monitoring of feed intake in Atlantic salmon, Salmon salar. This will not only increase the feed efficiency directly, but also be of great interest regarding breeding, enabling more accur...

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Main Author: Venås, Sigrid
Other Authors: Lekang, Odd-Ivar, Hansen, Bjørn Reidar, Støkken, Harald
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2629441
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spelling ftunivmob:oai:nmbu.brage.unit.no:11250/2629441 2024-09-15T17:56:23+00:00 Behavioral experiments for one-way trafficking and individual monitoring of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar Venås, Sigrid Lekang, Odd-Ivar Hansen, Bjørn Reidar Støkken, Harald 2019 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2629441 eng eng Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2629441 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no 60 Master thesis 2019 ftunivmob 2024-07-19T03:05:58Z The following experiments were set up to imitate the behavior of entering a feeding station, enabling individual monitoring of feed intake in Atlantic salmon, Salmon salar. This will not only increase the feed efficiency directly, but also be of great interest regarding breeding, enabling more accurate research of the heritability of feed efficiency traits in Atlantis salmon. In the first experiment hatches for one-way trafficking of fish were tested, by dividing a tank into two sides by a plexiglass wall attaching one-way hatches to two holes in the wall in different directions, having the fish swim through a hatch to access feed in one direction only. Inspired by traditional fish traps and fishing gear the hatches were cone-formed with the exit pointing out from the wall, limiting the fish’s ability to detect the exit opening, and cross through in the wrong direction. Further, the direction of the current through the hatches and the hatch size were tested to see how it would affect the cross behavior. The fish was monitored by a web-camera installed over the tank, programmed to take pictures every second during meals and record when movement through the hatches were detected. This led to thousands of pictures and hours of videos used to observe the cross behavior. Close to 100% of all crosses through the hatches were in the right direction and the fish preferred to cross against the current. The shape of the hatch was of greater importance than the direction of the current through the hatches. Further, three experiments were done to investigate the possibilities of getting one fish to enter a feeding area through one hatch, and back into a holding area through another hatch, and whether this behavior could be affected by increased flow and different feeding-regimens. Plexiglass were used to install a restricted feeding area in the tank, with the hatches used in the first experiment attached to each side to secure crossing in one direction only. The ability to utilize the feeding area increased over time and ... Master Thesis Atlantic salmon Salmo salar Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU
institution Open Polar
collection Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU
op_collection_id ftunivmob
language English
description The following experiments were set up to imitate the behavior of entering a feeding station, enabling individual monitoring of feed intake in Atlantic salmon, Salmon salar. This will not only increase the feed efficiency directly, but also be of great interest regarding breeding, enabling more accurate research of the heritability of feed efficiency traits in Atlantis salmon. In the first experiment hatches for one-way trafficking of fish were tested, by dividing a tank into two sides by a plexiglass wall attaching one-way hatches to two holes in the wall in different directions, having the fish swim through a hatch to access feed in one direction only. Inspired by traditional fish traps and fishing gear the hatches were cone-formed with the exit pointing out from the wall, limiting the fish’s ability to detect the exit opening, and cross through in the wrong direction. Further, the direction of the current through the hatches and the hatch size were tested to see how it would affect the cross behavior. The fish was monitored by a web-camera installed over the tank, programmed to take pictures every second during meals and record when movement through the hatches were detected. This led to thousands of pictures and hours of videos used to observe the cross behavior. Close to 100% of all crosses through the hatches were in the right direction and the fish preferred to cross against the current. The shape of the hatch was of greater importance than the direction of the current through the hatches. Further, three experiments were done to investigate the possibilities of getting one fish to enter a feeding area through one hatch, and back into a holding area through another hatch, and whether this behavior could be affected by increased flow and different feeding-regimens. Plexiglass were used to install a restricted feeding area in the tank, with the hatches used in the first experiment attached to each side to secure crossing in one direction only. The ability to utilize the feeding area increased over time and ...
author2 Lekang, Odd-Ivar
Hansen, Bjørn Reidar
Støkken, Harald
format Master Thesis
author Venås, Sigrid
spellingShingle Venås, Sigrid
Behavioral experiments for one-way trafficking and individual monitoring of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar
author_facet Venås, Sigrid
author_sort Venås, Sigrid
title Behavioral experiments for one-way trafficking and individual monitoring of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar
title_short Behavioral experiments for one-way trafficking and individual monitoring of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar
title_full Behavioral experiments for one-way trafficking and individual monitoring of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar
title_fullStr Behavioral experiments for one-way trafficking and individual monitoring of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar
title_full_unstemmed Behavioral experiments for one-way trafficking and individual monitoring of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar
title_sort behavioral experiments for one-way trafficking and individual monitoring of atlantic salmon, salmo salar
publisher Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2629441
genre Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
op_source 60
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2629441
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no
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