Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 18 Dec 2008

Effects of Fin Clipping on Survival and Position-Holding Behavior of Brown Darters, Etheostoma edwini

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Page Range: 916 – 919
DOI: 10.1643/CI-07-153
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Abstract

Advent of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) has allowed conservation biologists to use small portions of tissue to obtain genetic material for population genetic and taxonomic study. Fin clips are used extensively in large-sized fishes, but it is unclear how clipping enough fin tissue for genetic analysis will affect survival of smaller fishes such as minnows and darters, which are among the most threatened organisms in North America. We tested for effects of fin clipping on survival and swimming performance of non-threatened Brown Darters (Etheostoma edwini) in order to justify similar tissue collection in co-occurring endangered Okaloosa Darters (E. okaloosae). We collected 48 E. edwini from a small stream in northwest Florida, transported them to the laboratory, and randomly assigned them to one of three experimental groups: control, entire right pectoral fin removed, or rear half of caudal fin removed. Successful amplification of DNA indicated that our fin clips were large enough for genetic analysis using PCR. No mortality occurred during a two-month observation period. Fin regeneration was almost complete and we could not visually distinguish clipped fins from control fins after two months. We then randomly assigned fish into the same three experimental groups, clipped fins, and evaluated their ability to hold position at 20 cm/sec in an experimental flow chamber. Neither fish size nor treatment type affected position-holding behavior. Fin clipping does not adversely affect survival and swimming performance of E. edwini maintained in the laboratory. Additional research on the effects of fin clipping on small-sized fishes should be conducted in the field to evaluate survival under natural conditions.

Copyright: 2008 by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
Fig. 1
Fig. 1

Amplified PCR products from caudal fin (F) and muscle (M) extracts of six Brown Darters (sample ID: JDA1511–1516). Five ml of PCR reaction was loaded, along with 5 ml of 100 bp ladder (100 to 1000 bp in 100 bp increments) and the negative control (–). The 500 bp ladder marker is approximately 35 ng of DNA.


Contributor Notes

Associate Editor: J. M. Quattro.

Biological Sciences, Loyola University New Orleans, 6363 St. Charles Avenue, New Orleans, Louisiana 70118, e-mail: (FJ) jordan@loyno.edu. Send reprint requests to FJ.
University of Florida, Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, 110 Newins-Ziegler Hall, Gainesville, Florida 32611, e-mail: austinj@ufl.edu.
United States Geological Survey, Florida Integrated Science Center, 7920 Northwest 71st Street, Gainesville, Florida 32653, e-mail: hjelks@usgs.gov.
Received: 15 Jul 2007
Accepted: 01 Jun 2008
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