Abstract
Spontaneous locomotor activity was studied in juvenile sockeye salmon under controlled environmental conditions (LD 9.5:14.5 or 12:12; 5 °C; 0.1–34.4 lux). Siblings were hatched in activity chambers and swimming movements were monitored with an ultrasonic system for 11 months. The experiments gave evidence of a bimodal activity rhythm in sockeye fry immediately after hatching. The bimodal, dark-active pattern persisted until 9 days after the fish emerged from the gravel. The photobehavioral response was reversed and the fish expressed a unimodal, light-active pattern 10–14 days after first emergence. This light-active response was then maintained for 11 months.The possible interrelationships between age, photobehavioral response, and activity rhythms underlying the sockeye fry migrations to nursery lakes are discussed.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
12 articles.
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