The influence of body size on the intermittent locomotion of a pelagic schooling fish

Author:

Noda Takuji1,Fujioka Ko2,Fukuda Hiromu2,Mitamura Hiromichi1,Ichikawa Kotaro3,Arai Nobuaki3

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan

2. National Research Institute of Far Seas Fisheries, FRA, Shizuoka 424-8633, Japan

3. Field Science Education and Research Center, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan

Abstract

There is a potential trade-off between grouping and the optimizing of the energetic efficiency of individual locomotion. Although intermittent locomotion, e.g. glide and upward swimming (GAU), can reduce the cost of locomotion at the individual level, the link between the optimization of individual intermittent locomotion and the behavioural synchronization in a group, especially among members with different sizes, is unknown. Here, we continuously monitored the schooling behaviour of a negatively buoyant fish, Pacific bluefin tuna ( N = 10; 21.0 ∼ 24.5 cm), for 24 h in an open-sea net cage using accelerometry. All the fish repeated GAU during the recording periods. Although the GAU synchrony was maintained at high levels (overall mean = 0.62 for the cross-correlation coefficient of the GAU timings), larger fish glided for a longer duration per glide and more frequently than smaller fish. Similar-sized pairs showed significantly higher GAU synchrony than differently sized pairs. Our accelerometry results and the simulation based on hydrodynamic theory indicated that the advantage of intermittent locomotion in energy savings may not be fully optimized for smaller animals in a group when faced with the maintenance of group cohesion, suggesting that size assortative shoaling would be advantageous.

Funder

Promotion Program of International fisheries stock assessment from the Fisheries Agency of Japan

Joint research fund with Biologging Solutions Inc

JSPS KAKENHI

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference31 articles.

1. Hydromechanics of Fish Schooling

2. The increased efficiency of fish swimming in a school

3. Fish swimming in schools save energy regardless of their spatial position

4. The adaptive significance of schooling as an anti-predator defence in fish;Magurran AE;Ann. Zool. Fennici,1990

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