Effect of anesthetic, tag size, and surgeon experience on postsurgical recovering after implantation of electronic tags in a Neotropical fish: Prochilodus Lineatus (Valenciennes, 1837) (Characiformes: Prochilodontidae)

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Abstract

Implantation of telemetry transmitters in fish can be affected by different parameters. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of type of anesthetic, tag size, and surgeon experience on surgical and postsurgical wound healing in the neotropical fish Prochilodus lineatus. In total, eighty fish were surgically implanted with telemetry transmitters and forty fish were kept as controls. Forty fish were implanted with a small tag and other forty were implanted with a large tag. Similarly, forty fish were anesthetized with eugenol and forty fish were anesthetized by electroanesthesia, and forty surgeries were performed by an expert surgeon and forty surgeries were performed by novice surgeons. At the end of the experimental period seventeen (21.3%) tagged fish had postsurgical complications, including death (1.3%), tag expulsion (2.5%), antenna migration (2.5%), and infection (15%). Tag size was the key determinant for postsurgical complications. Surgical details and postsurgical wound healing were not affected by type of anesthetic. Incision size, duration of surgery, and wound area were significantly affected by tag size and surgeon experience, and the number of sutures was significantly affected by tag size only. The results indicate that successful implantation of telemetry transmitters is dependent upon surgeon experience and tag size.

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Lopes, J. M., Alves, C. B. M., Silva, F. O., Bedore, A. G., & Pompeu, P. S. (2016). Effect of anesthetic, tag size, and surgeon experience on postsurgical recovering after implantation of electronic tags in a Neotropical fish: Prochilodus Lineatus (Valenciennes, 1837) (Characiformes: Prochilodontidae). Neotropical Ichthyology, 14(3). https://doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20150189

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