Chemical alarm signals and complex hatchery rearing habitats
affect antipredator behavior and survival of chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus
tshawytscha) juveniles
Barry A. Berejikian, R. Jan F. Smith, E. Paul Tezak, Steven L. Schroder, and
Curtis M. Knudsen
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 56(5): 830-838 (1999)
Abstract: The
present study examined the effects of chemical antipredator conditioning on
antipredator behavior and the relative effects of antipredator conditioning and
seminatural rearing environments on postrelease survival of chinook salmon (Onocrhynchus
tshawytscha). Hatchery-reared juvenile chinook salmon were exposed to
extracts from conspecific tissue or to comparable stimuli from green swordtail
(Xiphophorus helleri). These "injured fish" stimuli were
paired with water that contained the odour of predatory cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus
clarki). Chinook salmon receiving conspecific stimuli showed higher levels
of several antipredator behaviors compared with chinook salmon receiving green
swordtail extracts. When the two groups of chinook salmon were tested 2 days
later with cutthroat trout stimulus alone, the chinook salmon that had
originally received injured conspecific stimuli paired with cutthroat trout
odour spent more time motionless than chinook salmon that had received green
swordtail stimuli and cutthroat trout odour. In another experiment, complex
rearing treatments had a negative effect on instream survival (contrary to
previous studies) that was compensated for by the application of the chinook
salmon extract and cutthroat trout odour prior to release. Chinook salmon, like
rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), show antipredator behavior in
response to chemical stimuli from injured conspecifics and learn predator
recognition when such stimuli are paired with predator odour, improving
survival in the wild.