Proactive avoidance behaviour and pace-of-life syndrome in Atlantic salmon
Author(s) -
Børge Damsgård,
Tor Hatten Evensen,
Øyvind Øverli,
Marnix Gorissen,
Lars O.E. Ebbesson,
Sonia Rey,
Erik Höglund
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
royal society open science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2054-5703
DOI - 10.1098/rsos.181859
Subject(s) - boldness , salmo , smoltification , stressor , population , biology , trait , hypoxia (environmental) , coping (psychology) , growth rate , ecology , zoology , fishery , psychology , demography , oxygen , salmonidae , fish <actinopterygii> , chemistry , social psychology , personality , clinical psychology , sociology , computer science , programming language , organic chemistry , neuroscience , mathematics , geometry
Individuals in a fish population differ in key life-history traits such as growth rate and body size. This raises the question of whether such traits cluster along a fast-slow growth continuum according to a pace-of-life syndrome (POLS). Fish species like salmonids may develop a bimodal size distribution, providing an opportunity to study the relationships between individual growth and behavioural responsiveness. Here we test whether proactive characteristics (bold behaviour coupled with low post-stress cortisol production) are related to fast growth and developmental rate in Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar . Boldness was tested in a highly controlled two-tank hypoxia test were oxygen levels were gradually decreased in one of the tanks. All fish became inactive close to the bottom at 70% oxygen saturation. At 40% oxygen saturation level a fraction of the fish actively sought to avoid hypoxia. A proactive stress coping style was verified by lower cortisol response to a standardized stressor. Two distinct clusters of bimodal growth trajectories were identified, with fast growth and early smoltification in 80% of the total population. There was a higher frequency of proactive than reactive individuals in this fast-developing fraction of fish. The smolts were associated with higher post-stress plasma cortisol than parr, and the proactive smolts leaving hypoxia had significant lower post-stress cortisol than the stayers. The study demonstrated a link between a proactive coping and fast growth and developmental ratio and suggests that selection for domestic production traits promotes this trait cluster.
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