Abstract

Abstract – Social interactions impact growth rate of animals in different ways such as direct or indirect competition for food and/or territories. In this study, behaviour of glass eels and elvers was described throughout three trials of 9 days spread out over 3 months. The impact of recruitment season (spring and autumn runs) and glass eels’ propensity to migrate (assessed thanks to an experimental sorting) on individual growth was studied. Overall, spring elvers were more aggressive and active than autumn elvers while autumn fish were more gregarious and reached a higher specific growth rate than spring fish. At the individual level, gregariousness and swimming, respectively, promote and impair growth rate. In addition, skinny individuals and individuals with high motivation to get food achieved better growth rate suggesting catch‐up growth processes. These findings may help in clarifying the complex relations between behaviour, growth, river basin colonisation and future sex (which is environmentally determined in eel) and then contribute to the urgent need of scientific knowledge to guide the stocking programme of this endangered species.

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