Abstract

Freshwater fish populations are in steep decline, prompting conservation measures and a need for their evaluation. Fish are increasingly monitored with passive integrated transponders (PIT), although the suitability of this tagging technique has not yet been validated for most European target species of conservation. Consequently, this study tested the effect of commonly used 12 mm full-duplex (FDX) PIT tags implanted into the abdominal cavity of common nase (Chondrostoma nasus L.) and European barbel (Barbus barbus L.). A controlled laboratory setup was used to compare survival, growth (both length and weight) and tag retention for two different size classes of sub-adults over 61 days. Survival in the treatment groups was high (96.7–100%) and not statistically different from the control groups (97.5–100%). Highest mortality occurred in small tagged barbel (n = 4; 96.7% survival), while no mortality occurred in large tagged nase. Mean growth rates for tagged fish (2.28 mm, 3.26 g) were similar to those of control fish (2.77 mm, 3.59 g). Overall tag retention rate was 99.0% and tag loss only occurred in nase. The results of this study demonstrate the suitability of PIT injection in the body cavity of nase and barbel > 100 mm TL, which is of high methodological importance given the increasing role these species play in PIT tag-based assessments of freshwater fish conservation in European rivers.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call