Predator
avoidance ability of juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytsoha)
subjected to sublethal exposures of gas-supersaturated water
M.G. Mesa and J.J. Warren
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 54(4): 757-764 (1997)
Abstract: To assess the effects of gas bubble trauma (GBT) on
the predator avoidance ability of juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus
tshawytscha), we created groups of fish that differed in prevalence and
severity of gas emboli in their lateral lines, fins, and gills by exposing them
to 112% total dissolved gas (TDG) for 13 days, 120% TDG for 8 h, or 130% TDG for
3.5 h. We subjected exposed and unexposed control fish simultaneously to
predation by northern squawfish (Ptychocheilus oregonensis) in water of normal
gas saturation in 6, 18, and 10 tests using prey exposed to 112, 120, and 130%
TDG, respectively. Only fish exposed to 130% TDG showed a significant increase
in vulnerability to predation. The signs of GBT exhibited by fish sampled just
prior to predator exposure were generally more severe in fish exposed to 130%
TDG, which had the most extensive occlusion of the lateral line and gill
filaments with gas emboli. Fish exposed to 112% TDG had the most severe signs
of GBT in the fins. Our results suggest that fish showing GBT signs similar to
those of our fish exposed to 130% TDG, regardless of their precise exposure
history, may be more vulnerable to predation