Night, day, sunrise, sunset: do fish under snow and ice recognize the difference

1. Although boreal lakes are ice-covered for several months annually, little is known about the behaviour of fish under ice. To consider the reasons for diel vertical migrations (DVM) it is important to compare periods under ice as opposed to under open water. Echosounding provides a tool for non-in...

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Published in:Freshwater biology Vol. 53; no. 11; pp. 2287 - 2294
Main Authors: JURVELIUS, JUHA, MARJOMÄKI, TIMO J
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford, UK Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-11-2008
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Blackwell Science
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Summary:1. Although boreal lakes are ice-covered for several months annually, little is known about the behaviour of fish under ice. To consider the reasons for diel vertical migrations (DVM) it is important to compare periods under ice as opposed to under open water. Echosounding provides a tool for non-intrusive continuous monitoring of fish, even in winter. 2. Changes in the vertical distribution of fish through six 48-h periods were monitored using a stationary, mounted echosounder that beamed vertically either from the bottom up or from the surface down from February to April, 2003. The up-beaming and down-beaming transducers were run alternately for 24 h each over the 48-h period. Standard echo analysis software was used to detect fish traces and estimate the vertical and temporal distribution of fish abundance. Fish were sampled with a winter seine. 3. Prominent diel vertical migration in response to changing light level was detected throughout the study period (late winter to spring). Fish were highest in the water column at sunset and sunrise. In daylight, most detected fish were well below 10-m depth. The number of fish detected was greatest during the night when they occurred throughout almost the whole water column, sometimes with a considerable number very close to the ice. Fish were mostly vendace and whitefish. 4. It became evident from data from the up-beaming transducer that at night fish may occupy the layer closest to the surface. These fish would not have been detected if we had only used the down-beaming transducer. The overall pattern of DVM in winter was very similar to that in summer. The results support the suggestion that DVM is a genetically fixed behavioural trait responding to the contemporary level of illumination.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2427.2008.02055.x
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ArticleID:FWB2055
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content type line 23
ISSN:0046-5070
1365-2427
DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2427.2008.02055.x