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Friday, November 8, 2024

‘Safety in numbers’ tactic keeps Pacific salmon safe from predators

Animals that live in groups tend to be more protected from predators.  That idea might be common sense, but it’s difficult to test for some  species, especially for wild populations of fish that live in the ocean.

A new University of Washington study that leverages historical data  has found unique support for the “safety in numbers” hypothesis by  showing that Pacific salmon in larger groups have lower risk of being  eaten by predators. But for some salmon species, schooling comes at the  cost of competition for food, and those fish may trade safety for a  meal. The study was published June 29 in the journal Science Advances.

“With salmon, most people think of them spawning in freshwater  streams, but there’s also this huge amount of time they spend in the  ocean feeding and growing,” said lead author Anne Polyakov,  a doctoral student in the UW’s interdisciplinary Quantitative Ecology  and Resource Management Program and the School of Aquatic and Fishery  Sciences. “One of the reasons why this study is so unique is that we  essentially can’t observe these fish at all in their natural ocean  environment, and yet we’re able to pull out these really strong results  on how grouping affects predation risk and foraging success for  individual fish using this incredibly valuable dataset.”

The researchers looked at four species of Pacific salmon — sockeye,  chum, coho and pink — drawing on an international fisheries dataset  collected for these species from 1956 to 1991. While their individual  life histories vary by species, all salmon are born in freshwater  streams, then migrate to the ocean to feed and grow before returning to  their home streams to lay eggs, spawn and die, continuing the lifecycle  for the next generation.

A graphic showing how a purse seine net operates. This style of net captures all of the fish in a discreet volume of water.Polyakov et al. Science Advances, June 2022

This study relied on analyzing existing historical data in new ways.  For more than four decades the UW’s Fisheries Research Institute in  partnership with the International North Pacific Fisheries Commission  recorded salmon catch data across the North Pacific Ocean as part of  managing each species. The study’s authors analyzed catch data from purse seine nets — fishing gear that involves dropping a net and capturing all of the  fish in a relatively small volume of water. By looking at numbers of  fish caught in one of these nets, the researchers could estimate the  size of the schools in which each fish had been swimming.

Additionally, the historical data included careful records of  predator wounds on the salmon, plus the stomach contents for a subset of  the fish caught. In this way, the researchers could estimate both  predator encounters and feeding success for salmon across 45 years,  spanning the entirety of the North Pacific Ocean — making this a unique  and valuable data set.

“It was serendipitous that these data were available. They suggest  that salmon are social during the ocean stage of their life and reveal  the benefits and costs of this sociality,” said senior author Andrew Berdahl,  an assistant professor in the UW School of Aquatic and Fishery  Sciences. “Grouping is very common in marine fish and we think this is  largely to help them evade predators, yet there’s actually not much  empirical support showing this, especially from wild populations. I  think this study is a piece of the foundation that many didn’t realize  was missing.”

By looking at the number of fish caught in purse seine nets as a  proxy for group size, the researchers then estimated predator risk by  considering the fraction of fish in each set that had predator wounds.  Fish in larger groups were much less likely to be wounded, across  species. For example, with sockeye salmon, an increase in 100 fish in a  group cut predation risk in half. Also, wound data showed that fish  whose bodies were larger or smaller than others in their group were more  likely to be attacked by a predator. This suggests that the salmon’s  safety in numbers comes from confusing their predators because visually  distinct — larger or smaller — individuals were easier for predators to  keep track of.

Coho salmon swim together in a group. Note:  This photo was taken at the Seattle Aquarium and serves to illustrate  this grouping concept in the wild.‘The Behavior and Ecology of Pacific Salmon and Trout’ / University of Washington Press 

The researchers also found that for two salmon species — sockeye and  chum — fish in larger groups had less food in their stomachs. These fish  sometimes sacrificed a meal to remain protected in a group and avoid  predators. The team didn’t notice this pattern for pink and coho salmon,  however. One possible reason for this, the researchers said, is that  sockeye and chum salmon spend a much longer portion of their lives in  the ocean, and also tend to travel farther away from their home streams  than other species. Spending more time and traveling farther out in the  ocean generally means food is harder to find, leading to more  competition and less food for fish in larger groups.

The authors hope this paper inspires eventual consideration of group  size distributions and the benefits and costs of grouping in current  fisheries management models — as well as dusting off other data sets to  reveal relevant findings.

“Many of these data sets came at great cost and I think there’s a lot  in them still ready to be uncovered,” Berdahl said. “I would hope it  also motivates people to think about the ecological implications of  collective behavior — in this case, how grouping impacts the food web,  both by changing the rate a species is being eaten as well as the rate  at which it is consuming others.”

Other co-authors are Tom Quinn, a UW professor of aquatic and fishery sciences, and Katherine Myers,  previously a research scientist at the UW School of Aquatic and Fishery  Sciences. This research was funded by the Fisheries Research Institute  and the H. Mason Keeler Endowed Professorship at the UW.

Original source can be found here.

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