Density dependent attributes of fish aggregative behaviour

PeerJ. 2019 Feb 4:7:e6378. doi: 10.7717/peerj.6378. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Grouping behaviour, as fascinating as it is unclear, has lately drawn the attention of numerous researchers. While most of the authors focused their work on a mechanistic approach to the matter of schooling, this study explores the issue from a population point of view. Present camera observation study on the fish community carried out in the epipelagic habitat of a European temperate reservoir in the Czech Republic explored the relationship between density and aggregative features of predominantly cyprinid fish stock. Results demonstrated that schooling behaviour is triggered by the 'critical density' of fish in the habitat. School size as well as counts of schools and proportion of schooling individuals increased with the density of fish. Counts of clusters (observed units in time, including singletons, pairs and schools) and cluster size, on the other hand, showed a slowing tendency to increase. The slower increase implies the tendency of fish for not being frequent but rather to create larger groups. Altogether, our findings suggest that fish density is a triggering factor in the formation of large fish schools. As the tendency of cyprinid species for school formation could be an evolutional advantage responsible for dominance in later succession phases of water bodies, we suggest that more in situ studies should be encouraged for the proper understanding of the ecological interactions that drive the structure of aquatic ecosystems and for ensuring unbiased assessment.

Keywords: Bleak; Bream; Critical density; Emergent properties; Freshwater fish; Open water; Perch; Roach; Schooling; Shoaling.

Grants and funding

The work was supported by MEYS, projects LM2015075 and EF16_013/0001782–SoWa Ecosystems Research, and ERDF/ESF, project CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_025/0007417–Biomanipulation as a tool for improving water quality of dam reservoirs. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.