Document of bibliographic reference 381577

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Body size scaling of space use in coastal pike (Esox lucius) in brackish lagoons of the southern Baltic Sea
Abstract
The northern pike (Esox lucius) has been intensively studied in terms of behaviour due to its relevance to fisheries and its importance for structuring fish communities in freshwater ecosystems. However, little is known about the behaviour of coastal pike living in brackish lagoons. Freshwater ecosystems, particularly lakes and small rivers, are usually finite in space, which can limit the expression of space use as a function of body size and other traits. Better understanding the spatial behaviour shown by coastal pike in extended brackish lagoons and its relationship to body size, sex, season and vulnerability to fishing is an important step to further our knowledge on brackish pike populations and can inform management. Here, we present two years of acoustic telemetry data acquired on a large sample of coastal pike (n = 210) with an extended size range (480 to 1.210 mm total length) inhabiting six interconnected coastal lagoons bordered by the islands of Fischland-Darß-Zingst, Hiddensee, Rügen and Usedom in the Baltic Sea (area ca. 1.200 km²). Overall, the space used by coastal pike (50 % and 95 % utilization distribution, UD) scaled positively with body size, with larger fish using significantly more space after controlling for co-variates, but this effect was mainly observed at the between lagoon level. Within a given lagoon, body size scaling of space use was only observed for the 50 % UD of males. We also found the ratio of 50 % UD on 95 % UD to scale negatively with size, meaning that larger-sized pike used areas out of their core ranges more intensively regardless of sex. Space use also differed between seasons, with activity spaces being elevated in spring likely due to spawning migrations and increased reproduction-related activity. Study design was an important co-variate for our space use proxies, as we collected proportionally more data on pike that used less space, but fish recaptured by fisheries did not differ in space use from those that were not recaptured. All space use proxies were found to be repeatable, suggesting an influence of pike personalities on their individual spatial behaviour. This study provides an updated understanding of spatial behaviour in Brackish water-adapted pike and its ties to body size, highlighting how body size in interaction with biotic and abiotic factors drives space use patterns.
Bibliographic citation
Dhellemmes, F.; Aspillaga, E.; Rittweg, T.; Alós, J.; Möller, P.; Arlinghaus, R. (2023). Body size scaling of space use in coastal pike (Esox lucius) in brackish lagoons of the southern Baltic Sea. Fish. Res. 260: 106560. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2022.106560
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
Félicie Dhellemmes
author
Name
Eneko Aspillaga
author
Name
Timo Rittweg
author
Name
Josep Alós
author
author
Name
Robert Arlinghaus

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2022.106560

taxonomic terms

taxonomic terms associated with this publication
Esox lucius

Document metadata

date created
2024-02-12
date modified
2024-02-12