Abstract
We investigated the presence of damage-released alarm cues and the reactions they may cause in landlocked migratory sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) using semi-natural laboratory conditions during the day. In two separate experiments, migratory sea lampreys were exposed to stimuli prepared from the skinless carcasses and skin tissue of larval sea lamprey and from the skin tissue and muscle tissue of migratory sea lamprey. Migratory female sea lamprey swam significantly longer after being exposed to the stimulus prepared from the skinless carcass of larval sea lamprey. No significant changes were seen in the behaviour of the migratory female lamprey in response to larval skin extract or in the behaviour of male sea lamprey to any experimental extract in the larval extract experiment. In the second experiment that utilised migratory lamprey stimuli, neither male and nor female migratory sea lamprey showed a significant difference in their behavioural response among different treatments and controls. Our findings indicate that adult female sea lamprey respond strongly to damage-released alarm cues from larval sea lamprey; hence, the latter holds promise for sea lamprey behavioural manipulations for control purposes during the day. Further research is needed to examine responses to damage-released alarm cues at night, when migratory sea lampreys are more active.
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