Soundscape characteristics of RAS tanks holding Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) during feeding and feed withdrawal
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35010Dato
2024-07-03Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Helberg, Gaute A.N.; Anichini, Marianna; Kolarevic, Jelena; Sæther, Bjørn Steinar; Noble, ChristopherSammendrag
Behavioural monitoring can provide crucial information on welfare and feeding in aquaculture. Passive acoustic
monitoring of behaviour can be particularly useful in recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS), as they often have
turbid water that impairs visual monitoring. Currently, little is known about the sounds that make up the
soundscapes in RAS tanks holding Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). In this study, hydrophones were used to
continuously record the soundscape in eight single tank RAS holding Atlantic salmon parr for 15 days, with the
fish in four of the tanks being fasted by feed withdrawal for five days from the sixth to the tenth day. The results
show that soundscapes in RAS tanks are affected by feeding. Two main sound sources were identified during
feeding in RAS tanks, one related to pellets delivery and the other to fish behaviour. The sound of pellets hitting
the water surface had energy concentrated at frequencies between 1.7 and 4.0 kHz, with peak frequency
decreasing and amplitude increasing with increasing number of pellets hitting simultaneously. The feeding
sounds of Atlantic salmon had energy concentrated at frequencies between 6.5 and 9.4 kHz.
More complex soundscapes were recorded during feeding events. These were characterized by variations in
amplitude and frequency that have been described by using acoustic indexes in RAS tanks for the very first time.
The Acoustic Complexity Index (ACI), the Acoustic Entropy Index (H) and the Normalized Difference Soundscape
Index (NDSI) showed distinct changes in the soundscape related to feeding events; ACI increased while H and
NDSI decreased compared to the times in between scheduled feeding times. The sound types identified in this
study and the outcomes of the acoustic indices indicate a possibility to monitor system performance as well as
fish behaviour in the tank soundscapes in RAS. Soundscape monitoring can contribute to match feeding closer to
fish appetite, improve water quality, and reduce risks that deviations in the system performance can have on fish
welfare during production.
Forlag
ElsevierSitering
Helberg, Anichini M, Kolarevic J, Sæther B, Noble C. Soundscape characteristics of RAS tanks holding Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) during feeding and feed withdrawal. Aquaculture. 2024;593Metadata
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