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Spawning Behaviour and the Softmouth Trout Dilemma Cover

Spawning Behaviour and the Softmouth Trout Dilemma

Open Access
|Jul 2014

Abstract

Morphological, ecological and molecular data sets do not completely agree on the phylogenetic placement of the softmouth trout, Salmo (Salmothymus) obtusirostris (Heckel). Molecules posit that softmouths are closely related to brown trout, Salmo trutta L. while some morphological, ecological and life history traits place them in the most basal position of the Salmoninae subfamily between grayling (Thymallus) and lenok (Brachymystax). Here we add an additional source of data, behavioural characters based on the first reported observations of softmouth spawning. During spawning softmouth females present three important behaviours not found in the other Salmo members: they continually abandon their nests, rarely staying on them for periods over nine minutes; they expel different batches of eggs at the same nest at intervals of several minutes; and they do not cover their eggs immediately after spawning. These three behaviours are intriguing for two reasons: 1) they are possible homologous to behaviours found in grayling females; 2) when coupled to the nest digging behaviour-widespread in all the salmonines, including softmouths, they seem to be mal-adaptive.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/aopf-2014-0016 | Journal eISSN: 2545-059X | Journal ISSN: 2545-0255
Language: English
Page range: 159 - 165
Submitted on: Nov 5, 2013
Accepted on: Feb 26, 2014
Published on: Jul 15, 2014
Published by: Stanisław Sakowicz Inland Fisheries Institute
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2014 Manu Esteve, Deborah Ann McLennan, John Andrew Zablocki, Gašper Pustovrh, Ignacio Doadrio, published by Stanisław Sakowicz Inland Fisheries Institute
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.