4.5 Article

Behavioral type, in interaction with body size, affects the recapture rate of brown trout Salmo trutta juveniles in their nursery stream

Journal

INTEGRATIVE ZOOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages 604-611

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1749-4877.12323

Keywords

animal personality; freshwater fish; recapture rate; Salmonidae; size-dependency

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Funding

  1. Swedish Society for Nature Conservation (Miljofonden)
  2. University of Gothenburg
  3. Swedish Anglers Association
  4. SoWa Research Infrastructure (MEYS CZ grant) [LM2015075]

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Movement activity levels of wild animals often differ consistently among individuals, reflecting different behavioral types. Previous studies have shown that laboratory-scored activity can predict several ecologically relevant characteristics. In an experiment on wild brown trout Salmo trutta, spanning from June to October, we investigated how spring swimming activity, measured in a standardized laboratory test, related to relative recapture probability in autumn. Based on laboratory activity scores, individuals clustered into 2 groups, which showed contrasting patterns in the size-dependency of their recapture probability. Size had a slightly positive effect on recapture probability for passive fish but a clear negative effect on active fish. Our results show that the population structure in a cohort, in terms of relative proportions of behavioral types in different size classes, can vary over time. The results of this study could depend on either selective mortality or migration. However, selective disappearance of individuals with specific phenotypes, regardless of the mechanism, will have implications for trout population management, such as stocking efficiency of hatchery fish with high growth rates or maintenance of fishways past migration barriers.

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