How to measure and use vitality in fisheries (video embedded)

A short video (2:06) is available on developing rapid visual in situ trait assessment (reflex actions, injury) associated with vitality impairment.

A longer video is available that describes how to measure and use vitality in fisheries.


Why is vitality impairment related to mortality?
By definition, healthy animals have full vitality. Vitality becomes impaired as animals become stressed by capture and handling. Severe vitality impairment can result from the effects of physical injury or other stressors, e.g., fatigue, temperature, light, sea state, and air exposure. Maladaptive stress responses or critical injury associated with severe vitality impairment can result in immediate and delayed mortality.
Why score reflex actions and injury?
Reflex actions are fixed behavior patterns that are directly related to vitality impairment, without control by volitional behavior factors, e.g., motivation, hunger, fear, shelter seeking, migration, and reproduction. Reflex actions reflect the state of neural, muscle, and organ functions.
Injuries are directly related to vitality impairment because they can control neural, muscle, and organ functions.
Scoring vitality impairment in general
Any type of reflex action or injury that is related to vitality can be summed to score vitality impairment. The important point is that a sum of presence/ absence scores for vitality characteristics produces an index of vitality impairment. This vitality index can then be used as a measure of variability for sublethal stressor effects in fisheries, as well as a validated indicator and predictor of mortality and survival.

Steps for making and using RAMP in fisheries.

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