4.6 Article

Flexible behaviour in a mesopelagic fish (Maurolicus muelleri)

Journal

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 78, Issue 5, Pages 1623-1635

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/icesjms/fsab075

Keywords

individual behaviour; light; predator avoidance; scattering layer variability; social aggregation; stationary echosounder

Funding

  1. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST)
  2. EU-project SUMMER [817806]

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This study assessed the short-term and long-term behavior of the mesopelagic fish species Maurolicus muelleri using a high-resolution dataset from a Norwegian fjord. The results showed that the vertical distribution of pearlside fish was influenced by ambient light levels, with individual behavior differences and potential implications for predator-prey interactions.
Variability of mesopelagic scattering layers is often attributed to environmental conditions or multi-species layer composition. Yet, little is known about variation in behaviour among the individuals forming scattering layers. Based on a 10 months high-resolution dataset from stationary echosounders in a Norwegian fjord, we here assess short-term and long-term behaviour of a single mesopelagic fish species, the pearlside Maurolicus muelleri. The daytime vertical extension of the monospecific pearlside scattering layers spanned four orders of magnitude ambient light in the autumn and winter and less than one order of magnitude in summer. While the main layers tracked relatively stable light levels over daytime, some individuals actively crossed light gradients of up to 1.5 orders of magnitude. This included individuals that moved between scattering layers, and apparently bold individuals that made regular upward excursions beyond the main population distribution. During the daytime, M. muelleri mitigated the risk of predation by forming tight groups in the upper scattering layer and, at light levels >10(-6) mu mol m(-2) s(-1), by instantly diving into deeper waters upon encounters with predators. Our observations suggest that individual, and probably state-dependent, decisions may extend the pearlsides' vertical distribution, with implications for predator-prey interactions.

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