Survival and drifting patterns of grass carp eggs and larvae in response to interactions with flow and sediment in a laboratory flume.

A series of laboratory experiments was conducted to better understand the behavior of grass carp eggs and larvae in moving water in order to develop and implement new strategies for control and prediction of their dispersal and drift at early life stages. Settling velocity and density of a represent...

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Main Authors: Andres F Prada, Amy E George, Benjamin H Stahlschmidt, Duane C Chapman, Rafael O Tinoco
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208326
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spelling doaj-100e9f85d5f946afa2968c414131675a2021-03-03T21:01:29ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011312e020832610.1371/journal.pone.0208326Survival and drifting patterns of grass carp eggs and larvae in response to interactions with flow and sediment in a laboratory flume.Andres F PradaAmy E GeorgeBenjamin H StahlschmidtDuane C ChapmanRafael O TinocoA series of laboratory experiments was conducted to better understand the behavior of grass carp eggs and larvae in moving water in order to develop and implement new strategies for control and prediction of their dispersal and drift at early life stages. Settling velocity and density of a representative sample of eggs were estimated, and three trials of flume experiments with different flow conditions were conducted with live eggs in a temperature-controlled setting with a mobile sediment bed. In these trials, egg and larval stages were continuously analyzed over periods of 80 hours; and eggs and larvae interactions with the flow and sediment bed were monitored and characterized qualitatively and quantitatively. Survival rates were quantified after each trial, highlighting physical causes for increased mortality. Detailed flow analysis was correlated to the observed drifting and swimming behavior of eggs and larvae, to estimate distributions across the water depth, as well as traveling and swimming speeds. Evidence of the influence of mean and turbulent flow in the suspension and transport of eggs are reported, and swimming patterns of larvae at different developmental stages are described. These findings support the development of new strategies for monitoring the spread of grass carp eggs and larvae in rivers, and provide new inputs to predict conditions favorable for spawning and hatching, allowing for mitigation measures at early life stages, which are critical to control their dispersal.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208326
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andres F Prada
Amy E George
Benjamin H Stahlschmidt
Duane C Chapman
Rafael O Tinoco
spellingShingle Andres F Prada
Amy E George
Benjamin H Stahlschmidt
Duane C Chapman
Rafael O Tinoco
Survival and drifting patterns of grass carp eggs and larvae in response to interactions with flow and sediment in a laboratory flume.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Andres F Prada
Amy E George
Benjamin H Stahlschmidt
Duane C Chapman
Rafael O Tinoco
author_sort Andres F Prada
title Survival and drifting patterns of grass carp eggs and larvae in response to interactions with flow and sediment in a laboratory flume.
title_short Survival and drifting patterns of grass carp eggs and larvae in response to interactions with flow and sediment in a laboratory flume.
title_full Survival and drifting patterns of grass carp eggs and larvae in response to interactions with flow and sediment in a laboratory flume.
title_fullStr Survival and drifting patterns of grass carp eggs and larvae in response to interactions with flow and sediment in a laboratory flume.
title_full_unstemmed Survival and drifting patterns of grass carp eggs and larvae in response to interactions with flow and sediment in a laboratory flume.
title_sort survival and drifting patterns of grass carp eggs and larvae in response to interactions with flow and sediment in a laboratory flume.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description A series of laboratory experiments was conducted to better understand the behavior of grass carp eggs and larvae in moving water in order to develop and implement new strategies for control and prediction of their dispersal and drift at early life stages. Settling velocity and density of a representative sample of eggs were estimated, and three trials of flume experiments with different flow conditions were conducted with live eggs in a temperature-controlled setting with a mobile sediment bed. In these trials, egg and larval stages were continuously analyzed over periods of 80 hours; and eggs and larvae interactions with the flow and sediment bed were monitored and characterized qualitatively and quantitatively. Survival rates were quantified after each trial, highlighting physical causes for increased mortality. Detailed flow analysis was correlated to the observed drifting and swimming behavior of eggs and larvae, to estimate distributions across the water depth, as well as traveling and swimming speeds. Evidence of the influence of mean and turbulent flow in the suspension and transport of eggs are reported, and swimming patterns of larvae at different developmental stages are described. These findings support the development of new strategies for monitoring the spread of grass carp eggs and larvae in rivers, and provide new inputs to predict conditions favorable for spawning and hatching, allowing for mitigation measures at early life stages, which are critical to control their dispersal.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208326
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