Atlantic sturgeon Acipenser oxyrinchus surfacing behaviour

Journal of Fish Biology
Laura M Logan-ChesneyM J W Stokesbury

Abstract

Atlantic sturgeon Acipenser oxyrinchus surfacing behaviour was investigated in Minas Basin (45° 20' N; 64° 00' W) and the Bay of Fundy with pop-up satellite archival tags (MiniPAT) measuring physical variables (pressure, temperature, light). Of six tags deployed during June and July, five provided pop-up locations and two were recovered after c. 4 months. Analysis of recovered archival data revealed that the frequency of surfacing events was highest (78·9%) when A. oxyrinchus were in Minas Basin at depths <10 m. Surfacing frequency decreased substantially when fish migrated into greater depths of the Bay of Fundy (>40 m). The tidal cycle in Minas Basin had a significant relationship to surfacing frequency, with the most surfacing events (49·5%) occurring on the flood tide, from mid- to high-tide. Surfacing events ranged from 0-12 a day and the maximum number occurred between 2300 and 0300 hours. Maximum surfacing ascent speeds ranged from 0·50 to 4·17 m s-1 and maximum descent speeds ranged from 0·17 to 3·17 m s-1 . Buoyancy control, by gulping air to inflate the gas bladder, is proposed as the main reason for surfacing behaviour in A. oxyrinchus.

References

Feb 1, 1966·Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society·R M Alexander
Apr 1, 1966·Physiological Reviews·R Fänge
Jun 27, 2001·Science·J H Chick, M A Pegg
Jan 16, 2013·Philosophical Transactions. Series A, Mathematical, Physical, and Engineering Sciences·Richard KarstenJoel Culina

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