Laying the foundations for selective-fish guidance using electricity: multi-species response to pulsed direct currents
Laying the foundations for selective-fish guidance using electricity: multi-species response to pulsed direct currents
To develop effective technology that employs electric fields to simultaneously guide valued freshwater fish whilst limiting the range expansion of undesirable invasive species, there is a need to quantify the electrosensitivity of multiple families. This experimental study quantified the electrosensitivity of two carp species that, in UK, are invasive (grass carp, Ctenopharyngodon idella, and common carp, Cyprinus carpio) and compared the values with those previously obtained for adult European eel (Anguilla anguilla), a species of conservation concern in Europe. Electric field strengths (V/cm) required to elicit physiological responses (twitch, loss of orientation and tetany) were identified across four pulsed direct current (PDC) electric waveforms (single pulse-2 Hz, double pulse-2 Hz, single pulse-3 Hz and double pulse-3 Hz). Grass carp were sensitive to differences in waveform with tetany exhibited at lower field strengths in the single pulse-2 Hz treatment. Both cyprinid species responded similarly and were less sensitive to PDC than adult European eel, although loss of orientation occurred at lower field strengths for grass than common carp in the single pulse-3 Hz waveform treatment. This variation in electrosensitivity, likely due to differences in body length, indicates potential for electric fields to selectively guide fish in areas where invasive and native species occur in sympatry.
Miller, Mhairi Catriona
eaa273db-109e-4e57-9346-192c1ef977c3
Sharkh, Suleiman M.
c8445516-dafe-41c2-b7e8-c21e295e56b9
Kemp, Paul S.
9e33fba6-cccf-4eb5-965b-b70e72b11cd7
16 September 2024
Miller, Mhairi Catriona
eaa273db-109e-4e57-9346-192c1ef977c3
Sharkh, Suleiman M.
c8445516-dafe-41c2-b7e8-c21e295e56b9
Kemp, Paul S.
9e33fba6-cccf-4eb5-965b-b70e72b11cd7
Miller, Mhairi Catriona, Sharkh, Suleiman M. and Kemp, Paul S.
(2024)
Laying the foundations for selective-fish guidance using electricity: multi-species response to pulsed direct currents.
PeerJ, 12, [e17962].
(doi:10.7717/peerj.17962).
Abstract
To develop effective technology that employs electric fields to simultaneously guide valued freshwater fish whilst limiting the range expansion of undesirable invasive species, there is a need to quantify the electrosensitivity of multiple families. This experimental study quantified the electrosensitivity of two carp species that, in UK, are invasive (grass carp, Ctenopharyngodon idella, and common carp, Cyprinus carpio) and compared the values with those previously obtained for adult European eel (Anguilla anguilla), a species of conservation concern in Europe. Electric field strengths (V/cm) required to elicit physiological responses (twitch, loss of orientation and tetany) were identified across four pulsed direct current (PDC) electric waveforms (single pulse-2 Hz, double pulse-2 Hz, single pulse-3 Hz and double pulse-3 Hz). Grass carp were sensitive to differences in waveform with tetany exhibited at lower field strengths in the single pulse-2 Hz treatment. Both cyprinid species responded similarly and were less sensitive to PDC than adult European eel, although loss of orientation occurred at lower field strengths for grass than common carp in the single pulse-3 Hz waveform treatment. This variation in electrosensitivity, likely due to differences in body length, indicates potential for electric fields to selectively guide fish in areas where invasive and native species occur in sympatry.
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Accepted/In Press date: 1 August 2024
Published date: 16 September 2024
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Local EPrints ID: 493528
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493528
ISSN: 2167-8359
PURE UUID: 979b1e6f-16f0-4ad9-af1b-88ed794e1953
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Date deposited: 05 Sep 2024 16:45
Last modified: 17 Sep 2024 01:39
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Mhairi Catriona Miller
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