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Fish migrate to escape predators

Antennas that detect pittagged fish migrating between lake and stream. Photo Jes Dolby.jpg Antennas that detect pittagged fish migrating between lake and stream. Photo Jes Dolby
Searching the colony for tags. Photo Mikkel Boel Searching the colony for tags. Photo Mikkel Boel
Winter migrating roach. Photo Niklas Liljebäck Winter migrating roach in a Swedish stream. Photo Niklas Liljebäck
By individually tagging fish in a lake and following their movements, a research team led by DTU Aqua has shown that migration is a very effective defence against being eaten

Each year billions of animals make annual migrations to escape adverse environmental conditions. Migration is a spectacular and important biological phenomenon, but studying what drives animals to make these arduous journeys is extremely difficult. Food and climate are classic explanations for animal migration, but the idea that animals migrate to escape predators is less well studied. Senior scientist Christian Skov, DTU Aqua and colleagues from Lund Universitiy, Sweden and Eawag, Switzerland now present direct evidence that migrants benefit by evading predators.

 

The biologists tagged more than 2000 individual fish (roach, Rutilus rutilus) in two Danish lakes over 4 years and monitored migratory behaviour using passive telemetry. Next, they calculated the predation vulnerability of fish with differing migration strategies, by recovering data from passive integrated transponder tags of fish eaten by cormorants (Phalacrocorax carbo spp.) at communal roosts close to the lakes. The results have just been published in Biology Letters.

 

The extensive field study shows that migration in a freshwater fish like roach that commonly migrates from lakes to streams during winter, confers a significant survival benefit with respect to cormorant, predation.

 

“Our study show that fish can reduce their predation risk from cormorants by migrating into streams, and that the probability of being preyed upon by cormorants is positively related to the time individuals spend in the lake during winter,” says lead author, senior research scientist Christian Skov,  DTU Aqua, National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Denmark:


“Our data add to the growing body of evidence that highlights the importance of predation for migratory dynamics, and is one of the first studies to directly quantify a predator avoidance benefit to migrants in the field.”

 

The research was financially supported by the Danish National Fishing Licence Funds, Formas, Swedish Research Council and a Marie Curie EU fellowship (FP7).

 

Further reading:

Skov C, Chapman BB, Baktoft H, Brodersen J, Brönmark C, Hansson, L-A, Hulthen K, Nilsson PA. 2013 Migration confers survival benefits against avian predators for partially migratory freshwater fish. Biol Lett 20121178.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2012.1178

 

Contact:

Senior Research Scientist Christian Skov, DTU Aqua
National Institute of Aquatic Resources in Denmark

http://www.dtu.dk/English/Service/Phonebook.aspx?lg=showcommon&type=publications&id=39620

 


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