Search results for "Atlantic cod"

showing 6 items of 56 documents

Cryptic microgeographic variation in responses of larval Atlantic cod to warmer temperatures

2021

AbstractAlthough temperature is known to drive species dynamics and distributions, our understanding of the extent to which thermal plasticity varies within species is poor. Differences in plasticity can arise through local adaptation to heterogeneous environments, hybridization, and the release of cryptic genetic variation in novel environments. Here, wild Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) from contrasting environments inside and outside of a fjord system in southern Norway spawned freely in a semi-natural laboratory environment, generating pure crosses and reciprocal hybrids. A common-garden rearing experiment of the larvae at 6°C, 9.5°C, and 13°C revealed cryptic genetic variation in thermal r…

biologyEcotypeEcologyGenetic variationGadusAdaptationbiology.organism_classificationAtlantic codLocal adaptationHybridGene flow
researchProduct

Spatial ecology of coastal Atlantic cod Gadus morhua associated with parasite load

2015

Acoustic tags and receivers were used to investigate the spatial ecology of coastal Atlantic cod Gadus morhua (n = 32, mean fork length: 50 cm, range: 33–80 cm) on the Norwegian Skagerrak coast in 2012. Monthly home ranges (HR), swimming activity and depth use varied considerably among individuals and through the months of June, July and August. HR sizes for the period ranged from 0·25 to 5·20 km2 (mean = 2·30 km2). Two thirds of the tagged G. morhua were infected with black spot disease Cryptocotyle lingua parasites; these fish had larger HRs and occupied deeper water compared with non-infected fish. The infected fish also tended to be more active in terms of horizontal swimming. From an e…

education.field_of_studybiologyRange (biology)Home rangePopulationAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationFish measurementFisherySpatial ecologyGadusAtlantic codeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBlack spotJournal of Fish Biology
researchProduct

Multiple-batch spawning: a risk-spreading strategy disarmed by highly intensive size-selective fishing rate

2022

Can the advantage of risk-managing life-history strategies become a disadvantage under human-induced evolution? Organisms have adapted to the variability and uncertainty of environmental conditions with a vast diversity of life-history strategies. One such evolved strategy is multiple-batch spawning, a spawning strategy common to long-lived fishes that ‘hedge their bets' by distributing the risk to their offspring on a temporal and spatial scale. The fitness benefits of this spawning strategy increase with female body size, the very trait that size-selective fishing targets. By applying an empirically and theoretically motivated eco-evolutionary mechanistic model that was parameterized for …

kalastusliikakalastuselinkiertomultiple-batch spawningevoluutioekologialisääntymiskäyttäytyminenAtlantic codVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Basale biofag: 470size-selective fishingfisheries-induced evolutionbet-hedgingturskafitness
researchProduct

Data from: Disentangling structural genomic and behavioral barriers in a sea of connectivity

2018

Genetic divergence among populations arises through natural selection or drift and is counteracted by connectivity and gene flow. In sympatric populations, isolating mechanisms are thus needed to limit the homogenizing effects of gene flow to allow for adaptation and speciation. Chromosomal inversions act as an important mechanism maintaining isolating barriers, yet their role in sympatric populations and divergence with gene flow is not entirely understood. Here, we revisit the question whether inversions play a role in the divergence of connected populations of the marine fish Atlantic cod, by exploring a unique dataset combining whole-genome sequencing data and behavioral data obtained w…

medicine and health careHolocenesympatric ecotypesAtlantic codbehavioral traitsMedicineLife scienceschromosomal rearrangements
researchProduct

Data from: Personalities influence spatial responses to environmental fluctuations in wild fish

2018

1. Although growing evidence supports the idea that animal personality can explain plasticity in response to changes in the social environment, it remains to be tested whether it can explain spatial responses of individuals in the face of natural environmental fluctuations. This is a major challenge in ecology and evolution as spatial dynamics link individual- and population-level processes. 2. In this study we investigated the potential of individual personalities to predict differences in fish behaviour in the wild. Specifically, our goal was to answer if individual differences in plasticity of space use to sea surface temperature could be explained by differences in personality along the…

medicine and health careproactivityAtlantic codfish behaviourhome rangeLife SciencesMedicineYears
researchProduct

Data from: Behavioural responses of Atlantic cod to sea temperature changes

2016

Understanding responses of marine species to temperature variability is essential to predict impacts of future climate change in the oceans. Most ectotherms are expected to adjust their behavior to avoid extreme temperatures and minimize acute changes in body temperature. However, measuring such behavioral plasticity in the wild is challenging. Combining 4 years of telemetry-derived behavioral data on juvenile and adult (30–80 cm) Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua), and in situ ocean temperature measurements, we found a significant effect of sea temperature on cod depth use and activity level in coastal Skagerrak. During summer, cod were found in deeper waters when sea surface temperature increase…

medicine and health caresea surface temperatureAtlantic codLife SciencesMedicinediel vertical migration
researchProduct