Among-individual variation of risk-taking behaviour in group and solitary context is uncorrelated but independently repeatable in a juvenile Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus) aquaculture strain
Behavioural traits have been shown to have implications in fish welfare and growth performances in aquaculture. If several studies have demonstrated the existence of repeatable and heritable behavioural traits (i.e., animal personality), the methodology to assess personality in fishes is often carri...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied animal behaviour science 2022-04, Vol.249, p.105596, Article 105596 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Behavioural traits have been shown to have implications in fish welfare and growth performances in aquaculture. If several studies have demonstrated the existence of repeatable and heritable behavioural traits (i.e., animal personality), the methodology to assess personality in fishes is often carried out in solitary context, which appears to somewhat limit their use from a selective breeding perspective because these tests are too time consuming. To address this drawback, group-based tests have been developed. In Nordic country, Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus) is widely used in aquaculture, but no selection effort on behavioural traits has yet been carried out. Specifically, in this study we examined if risk-taking behaviour was repeatable and correlated in group and solitary context and if the early influences of physical environment affect the among-individual variation of behavioural trait across time in order to verify whether a group risk-taking test could be used as a selective breeding tool. Here, we found that in both contexts and treatments, the risk-taking behaviour was repeatable across 7 days. However, no cross-context consistency was found between group and solitary, which indicates that individual Arctic charr express different behavioural trait in group and solitary.
•Risk-taking behaviour was assessed in the Arctic charr.•Fish were raised in plain versus enriched environments.•Risk-taking were tested in solitary versus group contexts.•Risk-taking behaviour was repeatable across 7 days in both contexts.•No consistency was found between the solitaryand groupcontexts. |
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ISSN: | 0168-1591 1872-9045 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.applanim.2022.105596 |