Swimming speeds and buoyancy compensation of migrating adult chum salmon Oncorhynchus keta revealed by speed/depth/acceleration data logger
1 National Institute of Polar Research, 1-9-10 Kaga, Itabashi, Tokyo 173-8515, Japan and
2 Otsuchi Marine Research Center, Ocean Research Institute, the University of Tokyo, Akahama, Otsuchi, Iwate 028-1102, Japan
*Present address: Biosphere Informatics, Department of Social Informatics, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan (e-mail: htanaka{at}bre.soc.i.kyoto-u.ac.jp)
Accepted August 21, 2001
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Summary |
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Key words: swimming speed, tailbeat frequency, angle, vertical rate, vertical migration, chum salmon, Oncorhynchus keta, homing migration, data logger.
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Introduction |
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Previous studies have indicated that maturing sockeye salmon Oncorhynchus nerka seem to swim at speeds of approximately 50 cm s1 in coastal waters (Quinn, 1988b) and migrate at an average ground speed of 4659 cm s1, i.e. the net sum of swimming speed and water current speed around the fish (Madison, 1972
). However, these swimming speeds were obtained using tagging and ultrasonic tracking techniques, and were either only estimates of the salmons ground speed or biased by the speed of the tracking research vessel. Therefore, the actual swimming speeds of migrating Pacific salmon have not been measured directly.
Several other studies have demonstrated that Pacific salmon usually prefer the surface water during their homing migration but also undertake a number of active vertical migrations (Døving et al., 1985; Quinn et al., 1989
; Ruggerone et al., 1990
; Tanaka et al., 2000
). The vertical migrations of some teleosts are suggested to be limited by the pressure difference between the minimum and maximum depth of the fish. Bloater (Coregonus hoyi) in the Great Lakes do not migrate to the surface water, so that the pressure change for bloater during vertical migrations is less than 60 % (TeWinkel and Fleischer, 1998
). However, homing chum salmon perform repeated vertical movements in shallow water to obtain directional cues (Døving et al., 1985
) and also dive to depths in excess of 100 m for behavioural thermoregulation (Tanaka et al., 2000
). Such large pressure changes and frequencies of vertical movements raise questions about the energetic cost of locomotion.
Vertical migration is a widely observed phenomenon in many teleost fishes including salmonids (Bevelhimer and Adams, 1993; Biette and Green, 1980
; Brett, 1971
; Clark and Levy, 1988
). The adaptive fitness of migratory individuals should be increased if the cost of vertical movement is low (Gliwicz, 1986
; Swift, 1976
). However, there is so much uncertainty in the published data on fish that it is difficult to draw any firm conclusions regarding the energetic aspects of vertical migration (Alexander, 1972
).
The chum salmon is a typical physostome, with a connection between the swim bladder and the gut. Physostome fish are able to fill their swim bladder by gulping air and venting it through the connecting duct (Brawn, 1962, 1969
). Some authors have assumed that this unique function of the swim bladder allows physostome fish to make rapid, large vertical movements (Blaxter, 1985
). However, it has also been suggested that, if a fish were to gulp air at the surface to give itself neutral buoyancy at depth, it would become grossly over-buoyant and unable to descend (Alexander, 1972
; Ona, 1990
). In addition, it has also been argued that physostome fish cannot secrete gas into the swim bladder at the rate required to aid buoyancy (Alexander, 1972
; Wittenberg, 1958
).
One method that can be used to investigate the energetic aspects of vertical locomotion and the role of changes in hydrostatic pressure is to study the fine-scale movements and swimming behaviour of fish as they undergo vertical migrations. The use of data loggers makes it possible to study a variety of behavioural variables (such as swimming depth and speed) of free-ranging aquatic animals. The use of data loggers was pioneered on seals, and the recent reduction in the size of the data loggers has led to a proliferation of studies on smaller aquatic mammals and seabirds (Kooyman et al., 1992; Naito et al., 1989
; Wilson and Wilson, 1995
). New developments, such as data loggers with an acceleration sensor, now permit studies that monitor the body motion of aquatic animals, such as the porpoising behaviour of free-ranging penguins (Yoda et al., 1999
, 2001
). In laboratory studies, the swimming patterns or tail thrusts of fishes have been monitored using a body accelerometer connected to a conductor cable (DuBois et al., 1976
; DuBois and Ogilvy, 1978
; Freadman, 1981
). However, this method is limited to fish that will swim carrying wires, so the body angles or tailbeat activities of free-ranging marine fish have been little studied. The present study describes the use of a recently developed data logger to record simultaneously the swimming speed, depth, tailbeat activity and body angle of chum salmon during their homing migrations in coastal waters. The results of the study are discussed with respect to the behaviour of the salmon during vertical migration and in relation to buoyancy compensation.
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Materials and methods |
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Two types of micro data logger (Little Leonardo Co. Ltd, Tokyo) were used on the chum salmon. In 1997, swimming speed and depth were monitored using a speed/depth/temperature (PDT) logger (UWE-200PDT; 42 g in air, 13 g in water, 20 mm in diameter, 90 mm in length, sampling frequency 1 Hz). In 1999, acceleration (sampling frequency 16 Hz) was also recorded together with the above variables using a speed/depth/acceleration/temperature (PD2GT) logger (W-190L-PD2GT; 60 g in air, 22 g in water, 21 mm in diameter, 117 mm in length). Both types of logger were cylindrical and had 1.0 megabyte (PDT) or 4.0 megabyte (PD2GT) of flash memory. Depth resolution was 0.05 m, and the maximum depth that could be measured was 190 m. The speed sensor of the loggers consisted of a propeller rotation counter. The stall speed of the recorder was determined experimentally to be 0.3 m s1 for both loggers. Speeds below these values were considered indistinguishable from zero. To calibrate the speed sensor, we examined the relationship between propeller speed (rev s1) and the flow speed in a pool. The relationship was linear from 0.3 to 1.2 m s1 for the PDT logger and from 0.3 to 0.9 m s1 for the PD2GT logger, and the coefficient of determination (r) for both loggers was greater than 0.92.
The PD2GT logger was equipped with two piezo-resistive accelerometers (3G sensors; Akebono Brake Co. Ltd, Tokyo). The measuring ranges of the devices were 4 to 4 g (g=0.98 m s2). The PD2GT logger was attached to the salmon to record acceleration in two directions: the surging acceleration along the longitudinal body axis of the salmon and the swaying acceleration transversely across the salmons body from right to left (Fig. 2). These recordings were used to detect the tail beat and body angle of chum salmon as described below.
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After the retrieval of the loggers from the field experiments, the data were downloaded to a computer and analyzed using Igor Pro software (version 3.16J; WaveMatrics, Inc., USA). The data were treated statistically using StatView software (version 5.0; SAS Institute Inc., USA). We present all values as means ± S.D., unless noted otherwise, and use P<0.05 to indicate statistically significant differences.
Fishermen on the Sanriku coast usually haul in their set nets twice a day and transfer salmon onto a boat. From the time/depth data recorded by the logger, we could easily determine when the salmon were transferred onto a boat. To exclude the data for salmon while in fishermens nets, we omitted from our analysis any data recorded after the previous net-hauling event. In addition, from the analysis, we excluded data collected in the first hour after their release, which we believe is enough for the fish to flee from the researchers vessel. We have already presented detailed characteristics of swimming depth and ambient temperature for the individuals studied in 1997 in a previous paper (Tanaka et al., 2000).
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Results |
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Table 1 summarizes the data on the swimming depth and swimming speed recorded from each of the tagged salmon. The salmon made frequent dives from the surface water, including a number of extended deep dives. However, deep dives were recorded less frequently around midnight. An example of the typical pattern of swimming behaviour of homing chum salmon is demonstrated by the data recorded from salmon 9904 (Fig. 4).
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Table 2 summarizes the duration, change in depth, vertical rate, swimming speed, tailbeat frequency, tailbeat frequency per 1 m depth change, amplitude of tail beat and body angle during the descents and ascents. There were significant differences in most of these behavioural variables between the descent and ascent phases (MannWhitney U-test). The change in depth during ascents (16.8±6.6 to 29.5±21.0 m) was significantly greater than for descents (14.6±5.5 to 30.4±23.8 m) only in salmon 9904. The vertical descent rates (0.26±0.07 to 0.37±0.11 m s1) were significantly faster, tailbeat frequencies per 1 m depth change (2.9±1.8 and 6.2±1.6) were significantly lower and amplitudes of tail thrust (3.0±1.2 to 2.5±0.6 m s2) were significantly smaller than during the ascent phase (0.22±0.07 to 0.29±0.11 m s1, 7.8±1.7 and 9.6±1.9 and 4.5±1.2 to 4.4±0.6 m s2). However, there were no significant differences in the swimming speeds between the descent (0.67±0.12 to 1.04±0.15 m s1) and ascent (0.66±0.43 to 1.03±0.19 m s1) phases. Consequently, salmon swam at a significantly steeper angle during the descent (25.3±5.3° and 22.9±4.2°) than the ascent (19.7±7.2° and 18.3±3.8°) phase. These results indicate that the salmon must have taken a shorter time to move to a given depth during a descent than during an ascent. In fact, the durations of descents (51.8±18.9 to 89.3±48.1 s) were significantly shorter than the durations of ascents (71.1±35.5 to 113.1±63.1 s) for six of the seven individuals.
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Discussion |
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Some authors have related deep dives of salmon to abnormal behaviour caused by sensory ablation. For example, Døving et al. (1985) and Yano and Nakamura (1992
) found that anosmic salmon made prolonged dives to the sea bottom with very little net horizontal progression. However, the behaviour of fish can vary greatly among species and environmental conditions. We have not observed such deep dives immediately after release (Tanaka et al., 1998
, 2000
). The series of deep dives found in our studies resulted from behavioural thermoregulation, not from stress caused by our methods (Tanaka et al., 2000
). We recorded the swimming behaviour of some chum salmon for more than a week, but could find no clear differences between the earlier and later parts of this period (Tanaka et al., 2000
). The present results showed that tagged chum salmon showed a diurnal pattern during recording periods. Mode range of swimming speeds of chum salmon in our results was 0.741.31 fork length s1, which includes both the predicted optimal speed that minimizes the cost of locomotion (Brett, 1995
; Weihs, 1973b
) and the estimated horizontal speed of migrating Pacific salmon (Quinn, 1988b
). Recorded vertical rates are also similar to those in previous studies on chum salmon in the sea (Soeda et al., 1985
; Yano and Nakamura, 1992
). Thus, we believe that our results provide reliable data for the swimming behaviour of homing chum salmon under natural conditions.
Our results indicate that salmon do not migrate immediately into their home rivers to spawn, but undertake extensive vertical and horizontal movements within the sea. Differences in geography, hydrographic features, physical condition or reproductive strategy could force salmon to make such detours during their migration in coastal waters. The estimated ratio of gross horizontal distance to net horizontal distance, which was greater than 1.0 for all fish, indicates that homing salmon did not drift passively with current flow but swam actively during the study periods. The high ratios for some fish suggested that coastal migrations are not strongly oriented but contain an element of random movement. In the data for salmon 9709, which was recovered in the river mouth near the release site, we found both a high ratio of gross to net movement and swimming speeds that were slower than the threshold of the speed sensor. This suggests that the swimming speeds of homing salmon change depending upon the geographic position of the fish within the sea. We found no clear relationships between swimming speed and tidal cycle. However, in addition to swimming speed, positional information about the individuals and the speed of the water currents through which they swim are required for a precise interpretation of the data. Future studies using both data loggers and positioning techniques will be required to address this question.
If salmon could achieve neutral buoyancy throughout their vertical movement, the depth profiles of descents and ascents should be symmetrical, and there would be no difference in energetic cost between them. However, as shown in Fig. 7, the profiles of descents and ascents were clearly asymmetrical. Chum salmon therefore appear to be unable to maintain neutral buoyancy during vertical movements. Could salmon achieve neutral buoyancy at the bottom of their descents? There are two possible methods of adding gas to the swim bladder: (i) air- or bubble-gulping at the surface and (ii) gas secretion during the bottom phase (Alexander, 1972, 1993
; Brawn, 1962
). If a salmon filled its bladder before a descent to achieve neutral buoyancy at its final deep destination, a descending salmon would have to deal with drag and buoyancy factors operating in the opposite direction to their movement. But, the ascent of the salmon could be assisted by its buoyancy, thus reducing energetic costs. In fact, some diving animals and seabirds are over-buoyant at the surface at the beginning of a dive because of air-filled lungs (Minamikawa et al., 2000
). Thus, during the ascent phase, they have been observed to stop swimming because their buoyancy provides sufficient propulsive power for ascent as hydrostatic pressure decreases (Williams et al., 2000
). However, if a salmon were to secrete gas into its swim bladder during the bottom phase, this would make it neutrally buoyant and provide it with sufficient uplift during the ascent phase without requiring extra propulsive power at the beginning of the descent.
However, the results of the present study do not support either of these proposals. Our results indicate that the tailbeat activity of chum salmon was continuous during the ascent phase. The tailbeat frequency per unit depth change decreased during the ascent and was higher during comparable parts of vertical migration than during the descent. Moreover, tail thrust during the ascent phase was greater than that during the descent phase. These data indicate that the salmon used more energy during the ascent, although ascent rate was slower than descent rate, and that chum salmon had a volume of air in the swim bladder great enough to achieve neutral buoyancy only in the surface water and, as a consequence, that they were negatively buoyant throughout the vertical movement. It seems that chum salmon do not increase their buoyancy prior to a dive. Wittenberg (1958) reported that the replacment of the gas volume of the emptied swim bladder of captive rainbow trout was 3055 % complete at 7 days and 32100 % complete at 13 days. This suggests that, if a fish of neutral buoyancy in the surface water dived from the surface to a depth of 10 m, it would take 7 days or more to recover its neutral buoyancy by gas secretion. Thus, we cannot reject the possibility that additional gas was secreted into the swim bladder, but the volume would have been very small for vertical migrations that occurred approximately every 615 min, as observed in the present study. Some authors have reported that descent rates were faster than ascent rates in the physostomes (Blaxter, 1985
). The functional reasons have not been discussed fully, but could have the same causes as in the present study.
It is not so clear why chum salmon, which are typical physostomes, have not evolved a rapid regulation of the swim bladder to save energy during vertical movements. Many studies on Pacific salmon indicate that chum salmon spend most of their life in the surface water (Ogura and Ishida, 1995). Thus, the function of a swim bladder in salmon is probably related to acquiring neutral buoyancy in the surface water, rather than modulating buoyancy for changing depth. In coastal waters, homing salmon dive to depths of over 100 m for behavioural thermoregulation (Tanaka et al., 2000
). In such cases, salmon could save metabolic energy costs in cool thermal refuges, where they often remain submerged for periods in excess of 24 h. Possibly, the benefit of thermoregulation can outweigh locomotor costs caused by the added negative buoyancy at depth if dive duration is long enough.
However, even if salmon cannot rely on the swim bladder for rapid vertical migration, the pneumatic duct of the swim bladder could still play a significant role during extended dives. For example, if gas were lost accidentally or through a duct of the swim bladder, the salmon could recover neutral buoyancy at the surface quickly by gulping air. Our results indicated that tailbeating activity was highest during the initial phase of a dive, suggesting that salmon cannot be negatively buoyant at the water surface. To maintain neutral buoyancy, the volume of the swim bladder needs to be approximately 5 % of the fishs volume in salt water (Alexander, 1993; Schmidt-Nielsen, 1990
). The typical specific gravity of a fish without a swim bladder is 1.07, so a chum salmon of average body mass in the present study (3.3 kg) without a logger could achieve neutral buoyancy at the surface with an air volume of 156 ml in the swim bladder. An additional 9.8 and 18.0 ml of air would be needed to balance with the PDT and PD2GT logger, respectively.
Our data show that negative buoyancy could make salmon descend passively with a lower energetic cost of locomotion than during the ascent phase. This finding suggests that the salmon could descend by gliding to some extent. In addition, the descent angle and vertical rate of descent of chum salmon tended to be greatest in the middle of the descent, not during the final phase. Decreases in descent rates are usually observed when aquatic animals utilize negative buoyancy for gliding movements (Weihs, 1973a; Williams et al., 2000
). During vertical movements, these animals show three phases of movements: steady stroking, stroke-and-glide swimming and a gliding phase (Williams et al., 2000
). The gliding phase is characterized by a marked and prolonged period during which no locomotor movements occur. In the present study, we found no prolonged interruption of tailbeat activity during descents. Therefore, our results suggest that descending salmon could swim-and-glide, but could not switch to a gliding phase. It is likely that the body form, small pectoral fin and composition of chum salmon did not allow them to utilize downforces effectively and to adopt a gliding strategy during the descent phase. We believe that the data loggers did not affect the buoyancy regulation of salmon, although the weight of the loggers could have contributed somewhat to swim-and-gliding during descent and the extra work during ascent. Neutrally buoyant loggers will be required in further studies.
That the steepest body angle is found during the middle phase also suggests that salmon actively manoeuvred themselves during the descent phase. It appears that descending chum salmon would not be able to prevent an uncontrolled descent unless they had readapted prior to the dive. In coastal waters during the homing migration, the functional significance of the vertical movement of Pacific salmon has been linked with navigation (Døving et al., 1985; Quinn et al., 1989
; Ruggerone et al., 1990
) and thermoregulation (Tanaka et al., 2000
). In both cases, the depths of homing chum salmon were related to the fine-scale hydrographic features in the sea. These precise and regular behavioural patterns suggest that salmon did not select a swimming depth at random. It appears that chum salmon anticipate the required depth of a dive and subsequently regulate their descent rate.
If a salmon were to maintain its body angle at a given value, the change in vertical rate would directly reflect the change in swimming speed. However, our data indicate that the body angle of salmon changed with vertical rate (Fig. 7). As a result, swimming speed was relatively stable during vertical movements (Table 2). This constant swimming speed, which was unexpected, raises a question regarding its adaptive significance. One possible explanation could be a stabilizing function as a result of continuous swimming at a particular speed. Fish with swim bladders can be close to hydrostatic equilibrium, but any disturbance will be destabilizing. This could explain the continuous fin beating of fish in apparently still water (Webb and Weihs, 1994). Therefore, it is possible that salmon have to swim at a particular speed to stabilize themselves during the descent and ascent phases. Alternatively, it is possible that the salmon maintain an optimal swimming speed that would minimize locomotor energetic cost. Hinch and Rand (1998
) reported that the tailbeat frequency of upriver-migrating sockeye salmon varied little within the different reaches of the river. These authors suggested that sockeye salmon have an optimal swimming speed that could minimize energy use while migrating upstream. However, the constant speed during vertical migration cannot be explained by the previously developed optimal-speed model (Weihs, 1973b
), which did not consider the effects of buoyancy forces. In future research, we need to consider not only the stabilizing function but also the correct model of an optimal swimming speed during vertical migration that incorporates changes in buoyancy for a better understanding of the swimming speeds of vertical movements.
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Acknowledgments |
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