. Scientific Frontline: Parasites alter likelihood of fish being caught by anglers

Monday, March 20, 2023

Parasites alter likelihood of fish being caught by anglers

Itsuro Koizumi (second from left) and Ryota Hasegawa (first from right), authors of the paper, with Taro Matsuda of Setsunan University (center), and Masashiro Naka (first from left) and Chiharu Furusawa (second from right) of the Koizumi lab
Photo Credit: Itsuro Koizumi

Parasitic infections in salmonid fish can increase or decrease their vulnerability to angling, depending on their body condition.

Angling, a type of fishing, is a popular pastime across the world, and is known to be 40,000 years old. Angling usually takes place in natural bodies of water, which may have populations of wild fish, or be stocked with cultured fish. Fish caught by angling may either be consumed, or may be immediately released.

Parasites are very common in nature, found everywhere that their hosts are found. Parasites are known to alter the susceptibility of fish to predators. Angling can be considered predation of fish; however, there has been almost no in-depth research on how parasites affect the susceptibility of fish to angling.

Associate Professor Itsuro Koizumi at the Faculty of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University, and graduate student Ryota Hasegawa have investigated how a mouth and gill parasite of the whitespotted char, a salmonid fish, affects its vulnerability to angling. Their findings were published in the journal The Science of Nature.

The tributary of the Ito River in Hakodate, Hokkaido, where the field survey was carried out
Photo Credit: Ryota Hasegawa

“We performed a field survey in a tributary of the Ito River in Hakodate, Hokkaido,” Hasegawa explained. “The study area was selected for three reasons: we knew that the parasite was common in the survey area; the char population was geographically confined to the study area; and the study area is part of a year-round protected freshwater area, meaning that the fish had not previously been exposed to angling which could affect their behavior.”

The study considered two parameters: the body condition of the fish (a relationship between their body mass and body length) and their parasite infection status (whether the fish was infected with parasites or not). Fish were caught by angling and by electrofishing, and the numbers of fish under each category were compared. 

(Left) A whitespotted char caught by angling during the survey; the parasite (yellow circle) attached to the mouth of a whitespotted char (middle); and a light micrograph of the parasite (right).
Photo Credits: Ryota Hasegawa, Itsuro Koizumi

Two specific groups of char were most vulnerable to angling: those that had a high body condition and also had parasites, and those that had a low body condition but no parasites. Larger fish were more vulnerable to angling.

“Our findings regarding the vulnerability of the char to angling could be explained by the interaction of behavior and infection status,” Koizumi elaborated. “As parasites negatively affect the body condition of fish in general, those with low body condition and parasites are outcompeted by those with high body condition—and so are less likely to catch the angling bait. Separately, those with high body condition and parasites exhibit a higher vulnerability to angling, as their behavior drives them to consume more sustenance to offset the effects of the parasites.”

When infected by parasites (orange triangles), whitespotted char with high body condition are more likely to be caught by angling (solid orange line). Among uninfected fish (blue circles), those with a lower body condition are more likely to be caught by angling (broken blue line)
Illustration Credit: Ryota Hasegawa

A survey of tweets curated from Twitter covering a three-year period was also conducted. Both anglers and customers at fish markets reacted negatively to parasites. The negative reaction to parasites by anglers is important, as they are more likely to release infected fish back into the wild. This increases the likelihood that parasitized fish are more common in areas that experience high amounts of angling.

“Our study shows that both parasites and body condition are important considerations in angling, and studies of behavioral responses of the char induced by human angling activities must take these criteria into account,” Hasegawa concluded. “Additionally, the reaction to parasites in fish angling might result in the increase of both host and parasite survival.”

Published in journalThe Science of Nature

Source/CreditHokkaido University

Reference Number: es032023_01

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