“…Traditional and recently established measurements of swim capacity include swim endurance as quantified by time to exhaustion against increasing water current velocities (2,6,8,9,10), maximum speed either against increasing water current velocities or in a static tank (11,12,13,14), swim distance (7,9), time active (9,10), time swimming against flow (9), burst frequency (9,10), and average position of the fish against a water flow axis ("mean y") (9,10). Although new quality measurements have been developed for larval fish including body angle (15), power spectral densities (16), and centerline posture kinematics (17), published quality measurements for adult fish are limited to manual scoring of perceived swim ability (3,4,5), tail beat frequency and amplitude (12). Moreover, manually assigned scores are subjective and do not scale well for higher throughput.…”