| Literature DB >> 25853245 |
Ana T Silva1, Charles Hatry1, Jason D Thiem1, Lee F G Gutowsky1, Daniel Hatin2, David Z Zhu3, Jeffery W Dawson4, Christos Katopodis5, Steven J Cooke1.
Abstract
Fishways have been developed to restore longitudinal connectivity in rivers. Despite their potential for aiding fish passage, fishways may represent a source of significant energetic expenditure for fish as they are highly turbulent environments. Nonetheless, our understanding of the physiological mechanisms underpinning fishway passage of fish is still limited. We examined swimming behaviour and activity of silver redhorse (Moxostoma anisurum) during its upriver spawning migration in a vertical slot fishway. We used an accelerometer-derived instantaneous activity metric (overall dynamic body acceleration) to estimate location-specific swimming activity. Silver redhorse demonstrated progressive increases in activity during upstream fishway passage. Moreover, location-specific passage duration decreased with an increasing number of passage attempts. Turning basins and the most upstream basin were found to delay fish passage. No relationship was found between basin-specific passage duration and activity and the respective values from previous basins. The results demonstrate that successful fishway passage requires periods of high activity. The resultant energetic expenditure may affect fitness, foraging behaviour and increase susceptibility to predation, compromising population sustainability. This study highlights the need to understand the physiological mechanisms underpinning fishway passage to improve future designs and interpretation of biological evaluations.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25853245 PMCID: PMC4390351 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0123051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Schematic of the Vianney-Legendre vertical slot fishway on the Richelieu River in Quebec, Canada.
Distance metrics, corresponding to locations of PIT antennas, indicate the cumulative minimum transit distance between successive fishway basins (beginning at 0 m). The order of the basin starts from downstream (basin 1) to upstream (basin 15) in accordance with the direction of fish movement.
Fig 2Box plots with the median (horizontal lines), interquartile ranges (boxes), and ranges (whiskers) of the time spent in each basin (A), groundspeed (B) and ODBA (C) exhibited by silver redhorse
Fixed effects from the top GLMM to explain TIB.
Random intercept variance was 0.257.
| Estimation method | Response | Model term | Coefficient | SE | df | t | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1)GLMM | Log(TIB) | Intercept | 4.44 | 0.24 | 198 | 18.15 | <0.001 |
| Basin # | -0.04 | 0.02 | 198 | 2.16 | 0.032 | ||
| N Attempt | -0.08 | 0.03 | 198 | 2.84 | 0.005 | ||
| (2) GAMM | Log(ODBA) | Intercept | -1.84 | 0.04 | 203 | -40.4 | <0.0001 |
| s(Basin #) | 7.143 | 11.7 | <0.0001 |
Marginal (fixed-factors) and conditional (both fixed and random factors) R2 were 0.041 and 0.4, respectively. (2) The intercept and smoothing function significance in the GAMM to estimate ODBA. Random intercept variance was 0.010 and the adjusted R2 = 0.281.
Fig 3The predicted time spent in each fishway basin (seconds ± 95% confidence limits) as fish attempted pass through the fishway for the first (1), fourth (4), seventh (7), and tenth (10) time.
Fig 4The estimated smoothing curve for fishway basin beginning at the entrance way at basin 1.
The y-axis shows the contribution of the smoother to the fitted values of ODBA. The solid line is the fitted curve and the dashed lines are the approximate 95% pointwise confidence limits. Model degrees of freedom are given parenthetically in the y-axis label