05441nam 2200697Ia 450 991082534870332120240516100308.01-283-40608-X97866134060881-4443-5461-21-4443-5458-2(CKB)2670000000139875(EBL)832261(OCoLC)769927237(SSID)ssj0000575638(PQKBManifestationID)11358333(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000575638(PQKBWorkID)10553225(PQKB)10151631(MiAaPQ)EBC832261(Au-PeEL)EBL832261(CaPaEBR)ebr10523221(CaONFJC)MIL340608(EXLCZ)99267000000013987520110706d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrAquaculture and behavior /edited by Felicity Huntingford, Malcolm Jobling, Sunil Kadri1st ed.Ames, Iowa Wiley-Blackwell20121 online resource (360 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-4051-3089-X Includes bibliographical references and index.Aquaculture and Behavior; Contents; Contributors; Preface; Foreword by V.O. Crampton; 1 Introduction: Aquaculture and Behaviour; 1.1 Why behaviour and aquaculture?; 1.2 About aquaculture; 1.2.1 What aquaculture is; 1.2.2 Why finfish are cultured; 1.2.3 Which finfish are cultured; 1.2.4 Kinds of culture systems; 1.3 Introducing the spotlight species; 1.3.1 Fish farmed for the table; 1.3.2 Fish farmed for supplementation programmes or conservation; 1.3.3 Fish farmed as ornamentals and for research; 1.4 About behaviour; 1.4.1 What behaviour is and why biologists are interested in it1.4.2 Some basic behavioural biology1.4.3 How complex is fish behaviour?; 1.5 Fish welfare; 1.5.1 Definitions of welfare; 1.5.2 Identifying and measuring welfare; 1.5.3 Talking a common welfare language; 1.6 Domestication, captive rearing and behaviour; 1.6.1 Domestication and captive rearing; 1.6.2 Selective breeding; 1.6.3 Are cultured fish domesticated animals?; 1.6.4 Behavioural responses to domestication and selective breeding; 1.6.5 Captive rearing and fish behaviour; 1.7 Criteria for effective and sustainable fish culture; 1.7.1 Production criteria; 1.7.2 Environmental criteria1.7.3 Welfare criteria1.7.4 Behaviour and effective, sustainable aquaculture; 1.8 Structure and content of this book; 2 Fish in Aquaculture Environments; 2.1 Introduction; 2.1.1 Fish and their behaviour; 2.2 Locomotion and swimming ability; 2.2.1 Body form; 2.2.2 Swimming muscles; 2.3 Sensing environmental stimuli; 2.3.1 Sensory cues in the aquatic environment; 2.3.2 Vision; 2.3.3 Mechanosensory systems; 2.3.4 Thermoreception; 2.3.5 Electroreception; 2.3.6 Chemoreception; 2.4 Internal communication systems; 2.4.1 Role of the neural and endocrine systems; 2.4.2 The nervous system2.4.3 The endocrine system2.4.4 Cross-talk between the nervous and endocrine system; 2.5 Coping with adverse conditions; 2.5.1 Unpredictable environments; 2.5.2 The stress response; 2.6 Contrasts in life history patterns and reproductive biology; 2.6.1 Reproductive options; 2.6.2 Rates of development; 2.6.3 Developmental contrasts in farmed species; 2.7 Life history programming; 2.7.1 Genotype-environmental interactions; 2.7.2 Maternal contributions; 2.7.3 Environmental factors and the development of motor systems in fish; 2.7.4 Long-term consequences of early developmental events2.8 Synopsis3 Tools for Studying the Behaviour of Farmed Fish; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Describing and measuring behaviour; 3.3 What we need to know about the behaviour of farmed fish; 3.4 Indirect reconstruction of the behaviour of cultured fish; 3.4.1 Reconstructing fish diets; 3.4.2 Reconstructing interactions with predators and rivals; 3.4.3 Indirect assessment of stress; 3.5 Methods of marking and tagging fish; 3.5.1 External marks and tags; 3.5.2 Internal tags; 3.5.3 Internal tags that are visible externally; 3.6 Direct behavioural observation via video monitoring; 3.6.1 Video technology3.6.2 LimitationsModern aquaculture is faced with a number of challenges, including public concern about environmental impacts and the welfare of farmed fish. A fundamental understanding of fish biology is central to finding ways to meet these challenges and is also essential for maintaining the industry's sustainability. Furthermore, the behaviour of fish under culture situations has long been ignored despite heavy commercial losses that can result from fish stressed and hence disease-prone, due to bad husbandry techniques. This important book summarises the current understanding of the behavioural biAquacultureFishesBehaviorShellfishBehaviorAquaculture.FishesBehavior.ShellfishBehavior.639.801/5915Huntingford Felicity1685661Jobling Malcolm875257Kadri Sunil1685662MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910825348703321Aquaculture and behavior4057956UNINA