4 research outputs found

    Spawning behaviour of Sakhalin taimen, Parahucho perryi

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    Abstract A video camera mounted in an underwater housing and remotely operated was used to monitor the behaviour of five different Sakhalin taimen (Parahucho perryi), females and attendant males spawning in three coastal tributary streams in Northern Hokkaido, Japan. Based on three complete and two incomplete spawnings, we describe in detail for the first time the complete spawning behavioural repertoire of this species. The Sakhalin taimen was originally placed within Hucho, then removed from that genus based on morphological, life history and molecular data. Our study supports that removal-none of the behavioural traits we recorded clustered Parahucho with Hucho uniquely. Similarities between the two genera were all plesiomorphic traits that are widespread throughout the salmonines. The immediate behaviour right after spawning was found to be a major difference between Hucho and Parahucho. Like female Oncorhynchus and Salmo, Sakhalin taimen females cover their eggs by beats of their tails immediately after spawning. This is different from the "rest, then cover" behaviour shown by Siberian taimen (Hucho taimen) as well as lenok (Brachymystax lenok), supporting again that the Sakhalin taimen be removed from Hucho and placed in its own genus

    Spawning behaviour and the softmouth trout dilemma

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    Morphological, ecological and molecular data sets do not completely agree on the phylogenetic placement of the softmouth trout, Salmo (Salmothymus) obtusirostris (Heckel). Molecules posit that softmouths are closely related to brown trout, Salmo trutta L. while some morphological, ecological and life history traits place them in the most basal position of the Salmoninae subfamily between grayling (Thymallus) and lenok (Brachymystax). Here we add an additional source of data, behavioural characters based on the first reported observations of softmouth spawning. During spawning softmouth females present three important behaviours not found in the other Salmo members: they continually abandon their nests, rarely staying on them for periods over nine minutes; they expel different batches of eggs at the same nest at intervals of several minutes; and they do not cover their eggs immediately after spawning. These three behaviours are intriguing for two reasons: 1) they are possible homologous to behaviours found in grayling females; 2) when coupled to the nest digging behaviour-widespread in all the salmonines, including softmouths, they seem to be mal-adaptive.Peer Reviewe

    Lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) spawning behavior: the evolution of a new female strategy. Environmental Biology of Fishes

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    Abstract A video camera inside an underwater housing was used to record the spawning activities of lake trout, Salvelinus namaycush, in Kushog Lake, Ontario (Canada). Contrary to the commonly accepted belief describing lake trout as the only salmonine to spawn exclusively at night, the recordings were taken during the day. Lake trout spawning behaviour is described in detail and compared with other salmonine species. The loss of female "nest-building" and assumption of a novel itinerant strategy during which females travel across the breeding grounds accompanied by a group of males, is considered to be an important change in the evolution of the lake trout's unique mode of spawning
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