Stranding: a blessing or a curse? Testing assumptions of fish welfare during habitat fragmentation

Grantees: Laura R. Stein, Justine Rionach McCarthy

 

Institution: University of Oklahoma, US

Grant amount: $136,365

 

Grant type: Challenge grants

Focal species: Threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus)

 

Conservation status: Least concern

Disciplines: Physiology, animal behavior, ichthyology

 

Research locations: United States


Project summary

Fragmentation of freshwater habitats due to drought and heatwaves poses significant risks to aquatic organisms, particularly small fish, who are often overlooked in animal welfare studies. While fragmentation is generally considered detrimental to fish welfare — leading to stress, reduced social interactions, and increased mortality — there is also potential for positive welfare effects, such as reduced predation pressure or temperature-induced metabolic benefits. This project will use threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) as a model system to: 1) validate tests of fish welfare for use in the field (indicators include metabolic scope, cortisol release rate, attention bias, and behavioral expression), and 2) test the hypothesis that fish stranded in fragmented areas experience different welfare outcomes compared to those in connected river regions.

Why we funded this project

This project will integrate multiple welfare indicators to evaluate behavioral and physiological responses, contributing to a deeper understanding of how environmental fragmentation impacts individual fish welfare, and developing non-invasive field methods for use on small fish species. This project also supports a Wild Animal Initiative fellow, PhD candidate Rionach McCarthy, who has a strong interest in welfare.


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Harnessing machine learning for the non-invasive assessment of wild fish welfare

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Validating welfare indicators in an arachnid and their relationship to leg loss, a common defense strategy