Rocky mountain sculpin swimming activity in a three-chambered flume
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https://datadryad.org/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.vhhmgqp5c
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Rocky Mountain Sculpins are an imperiled species endemic to a restricted
geographic distribution between Montana and Alberta. They occupy rivers
with distinct seasonal flow regimes: one is relatively fast (St. Mary),
one is relatively slow (Lee Creek), and one is intermediate (N. Milk
River). Sculpins from St. Mary and Lee Cr. were endemic; those from N.
Milk were likely introduced. We caught fishes from each location,
transported them back to the University of Alberta, and acclimated them to
holding conditions. We then tested their swimming behaviour in a
three-chambered flume (details of the flume can be found in
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-011-9867-2). The flume consisted of
upstream and downstream boxes connected by a 1 m swim tunnel. Upstream and
downstream place preference was recorded over 24 hours, and flow speed
within the flume was increased in 15 cm/s steps over the course of a day.
The willingness of the sculpins to move, as well as to travel in the swim
tunnel, were recorded. All time spent moving (active) and stationary were
noted throughout. The three subpopulations differed in time spent in the
upstream and downstream locales, indicating behavioral adaptation to the
different flow regimes. There was also evidence of individual fish that
were highly exploratory, suggesting the presence of unique phenotypes
within the species. The data suggest that sculpins have behavioral
differences that likely reflect life in their unique riverine habitats.
提供机构:
Dryad
创建时间:
2025-04-15



