Hundt Peter J, White Lauren A, Craft Meggan E, Bajer Przemyslaw G
Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology University of Minnesota St. Paul Minnesota USA.
Minnesota Aquatic Invasive Species Research Center (MAISRC) St. Paul Minnesota USA.
Ecol Evol. 2022 Mar 7;12(3):e8666. doi: 10.1002/ece3.8666. eCollection 2022 Feb.
Heterogeneity in social interactions can have important consequences for the spread of information and diseases and consequently conservation and invasive species management. Common carp ( are a highly social, ubiquitous, and invasive freshwater fish. Management strategies targeting foraging carp may be ideal because laboratory studies have suggested that carp can learn, have individual personalities, a unique diet, and often form large social groups. To examine social feeding behaviors of wild carp, we injected 344 carp with passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags and continuously monitored their feeding behaviors at multiple sites in a natural lake in Minnesota, USA. The high-resolution, spatio-temporal data were analyzed using a Gaussian mixture model (GMM). Based on these associations, we analyzed group size, feeding bout duration, and the heterogeneity and connectivity of carp social networks at foraging sites. Wild carp responded quickly to bait, forming aggregations most active from dusk to dawn. During the 2020 baiting period (20 days), 133 unique carp were detected 616,593 times. There was some evidence that feeding at multiple sites was constrained by basin geography, but not distance alone. GMM results suggested that feeding bouts were short, with frequent turnover of small groups. Individual foraging behavior was highly heterogeneous with Gini coefficients of 0.79 in 2020 and 0.66 in 2019. "Superfeeders"-those contributing to 80% of total cumulative detections (top 18% and top 29% of foragers in 2020 and 2019 respectively)-were more likely to be detected earlier at feeding stations, had larger body sizes, and had higher network measures of degree, weighted degree, and betweenness than non-superfeeders. Overall, our results indicate that wild carp foraging is social, easily induced by bait, dominated by large-bodied individuals, and potentially predictable, which suggests social behaviors could be leveraged in management of carp, one of the world's most recognizable and invasive fish.
社会互动的异质性会对信息和疾病的传播产生重要影响,进而影响保护和入侵物种管理。鲤鱼是一种高度群居、分布广泛的入侵性淡水鱼。针对觅食鲤鱼的管理策略可能是理想的,因为实验室研究表明,鲤鱼能够学习,具有个体性格、独特的饮食,并且经常形成大型社会群体。为了研究野生鲤鱼的社会觅食行为,我们给344条鲤鱼注射了被动集成应答器(PIT)标签,并在美国明尼苏达州一个天然湖泊的多个地点持续监测它们的觅食行为。使用高斯混合模型(GMM)分析了高分辨率的时空数据。基于这些关联,我们分析了觅食地点的群体规模、觅食回合持续时间以及鲤鱼社会网络的异质性和连通性。野生鲤鱼对诱饵反应迅速,在黄昏至黎明期间形成最活跃的聚集。在2020年的诱捕期(20天)内,共检测到133条独特的鲤鱼616593次。有证据表明,在多个地点觅食受到流域地理的限制,但不仅仅受距离的限制。GMM结果表明觅食回合很短,小群体频繁更替。个体觅食行为高度异质,2020年的基尼系数为0.79,2019年为0.66。“超级觅食者”——分别占2020年和2019年累计检测总数80%(分别为觅食者中排名前18%和前29%)——比非超级觅食者更有可能在觅食站更早被检测到,体型更大,并且在网络度数、加权度数和中介中心性方面的测量值更高。总体而言,我们的结果表明野生鲤鱼觅食具有社会性,容易被诱饵诱导,由体型较大的个体主导,并且具有潜在的可预测性,这表明社会行为可用于鲤鱼(世界上最知名的入侵鱼类之一)的管理。