Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4397447 Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 2007 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The escape response of Atlantic cod larvae (Gadus morhua) 25 and 47 days post hatch (dph) – either fed or deprived of food for three days – was studied. Larval escape responses were provoked by water movement from the suction of a fixed-position pipette. Escape latency, distance, speed, burst speed, and vertical and lateral escape angles were quantified using motion tracking software designed for 3-D silhouette video recordings. Escape performance, expressed as escape distance and escape speed, improved with age. The escape angles were normally distributed and highly variable, ranging from − 170° to 170° and − 40° to 105° for lateral and vertical escape angles respectively. No food deprivation-induced effects in any of the behaviours were found, suggesting that there are no condition-related behavioural effects (size-independent effects) in escape response performance after 3 d of food deprivation. This may reflect a negligible difference in the cost/benefit equation for fed vs. food-deprived larvae in performing an escape response when under attack.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Aquatic Science
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