Abstract

Free vehicles carrying bait, video cameras and current meters were deployed at three sites in the abyssal North Pacific Ocean in 1983 and 1984 (at depths of 3 800, 4 400 and 5 800 m). From the recovered video recordings, we analyzed responses of the abyssal grenadier fishes Coryphaenoides spp. to the bait, and, from the recovered current meters, we determined the velocities of the nearbottom tidal currents. The grenadiers consistently arrived at the camera within minutes after it landed (7.5 to 41 min, N=9 deployments), but the times of the first arrivals tended to increase within increasing distance from shore (which was correlated with increasing depth). Faster responses occurred near times of peak, as opposed to slack, current velocities. Behavioral observations suggest that grenadiers primarily use olfaction in locating the bait, because 75% of early arrivals came from down-current. Those coming from up-current typically did not appear to sense the bait until arriving down-current from it. A “wait” rather than “search” strategy is proposed for the use of food falls by these deep-sea scavengers.

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