Abstract

Two species of congeneric filter-feeding microphagous carps from Asia, the bighead and the silver carp, were recently introduced to North America and have become highly invasive. These species of carp have similar food habits but the silver carp has the unique habit of jumping when disturbed. Both species have complex but poorly understood social behaviors and while both are thought to aggregate (form groups) and shoal (form tight social groups), this possibility has not yet been examined in these species. The present study examined the grouping tendencies of these species in the laboratory and the effects of fish density and species identity on it. Using nearest neighbor distance (NND) as a metric, we showed that both juvenile bighead and juvenile silver carp grouped (aggregate) strongly (P<0.05) but to different extents, and that fish density had no effect (P>0.05) on this behavior. Within aggregations, bighead carp tended to form a single large shoal while silver carp formed shoals of 2–3 individuals. Further, when tested as mixed-species groups, bighead and silver carp readily shoaled with each other but not with the common carp, which is from Eurasia and a member of another feeding guild. Due to their similar feeding strategies, we speculate that the bighead and silver carp tend to aggregate and shoal to facilitate both their foraging efforts and to avoid predation, while the differences in the size of the shoals they form may seemingly reflect their different anti-predation strategies. These complex shoaling behaviors likely influence Asian carp distribution in rivers, and thus how they might be sampled and managed.

Highlights

  • The bigheaded carps, which include the silver carp, Hypophthalmichthys molitrix, and the bighead carp, H. nobilis, evolved in large rivers in Asia

  • This study found that juvenile bighead and silver carp aggregated strongly and formed shoals, but in very different ways and that density had no influence on aggregation behaviors

  • Juvenile bighead carp formed tighter aggregations and larger shoals, while the silver carp formed smaller shoals of only 2–3 fish. When these species were placed together, they shoaled together forming single, large shoals that were not different than those formed by just bighead carp

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Summary

Introduction

The bigheaded carps, which include the silver carp, Hypophthalmichthys molitrix, and the bighead carp, H. nobilis, evolved in large rivers in Asia. Both of these species (which are often considered a type of “Asian carp”) are microphagous and consume a wide and overlapping range of very small phyto- and zooplankton as well as detritus [1, 2, 3]. Jumping presumably reflects an anti-predation strategy in the silver carp [5]. Both species of Asian carp are important to global aquaculture.

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