scholarly journals Triploidy affects postprandial ammonia excretion but not specific dynamic action in 1+ brook charr, Salvelinus fontinalis

Aquaculture ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 536 ◽  
pp. 736503
Author(s):  
Nicole J. Daigle ◽  
Charles F.D. Sacobie ◽  
Christine E. Verhille ◽  
Tillmann J. Benfey
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole J Daigle ◽  
Charles FD Sacobie ◽  
Christine E Verhille ◽  
Tillmann J Benfey

The use of sterile triploids in aquaculture is currently limited because of reduced performance in situations of aerobic stress such as high temperature, hypoxia, and exhaustive exercise. Many studies have therefore attempted to find underlying metabolic differences between triploids and their diploid counterparts to improve triploid rearing protocols. This study investigated the effects of triploidy on postprandial metabolism (and therefore also pre-feeding standard metabolic rate; SMR) by measuring oxygen uptake and total ammonia nitrogen (TAN) excretion at 14-15°C of previously fasted (for eight days) diploid and triploid brook charr, Salvelinus fontinalis, from 48h before to 48h after being fed a single ration of 0.4% body mass. Triploids had significantly lower SMRs and higher postprandial metabolic rates (i.e., specific dynamic action) and net TAN excretion than diploids. While this greater cost of processing a meal may not represent a major diversion of metabolic reserves for triploids, it could affect their growth and survival when simultaneously faced with oxygen-limiting conditions.


Author(s):  
B. L. Bayne ◽  
C. Scullard

The results of experiments recorded by Bayne & Scullard (1977) confirmed earlier studies (Bayne, 1973) in describing a decline in the rate of oxygen uptake (Vo2) by Mytilus edulis during starvation, eventually reaching a steady-state value, called the standard rate of oxygen consumption. Earlier experiments had also shown that if such starved mussels were fed, oxygen uptake increased rapidly to a high level called the active rate of oxygen consumption (Thompson & Bayne, 1972; Bayne, Thompson & Widdows, 1973). Some of this increase in metabolic rate is undoubtedly due to an increased filtration rate that is stimulated by the presence of food (the ‘mechanical cost of feeding’ discussed by Bayne et al. 1976), and part is due to the ‘physiological costs of feeding’, which includes energy utilized in digestion and assimilation of the food, and energy that is lost during deamination and other catabolic processes that accompany digestion (Warren & Davis, 1967). Increases in metabolic rate associated with feeding have been called the specific dynamic action (SDA) of the ration (see Harper, 1971, for a discussion) or the apparent SDA (Beamish, 1974)5 and they have been related to aspects of protein metabolism (Krebs, 1964). This paper describes the results of some experiments designed to examine the relationships between SDA and ammonia excretion in Mytilus edulis L.


2008 ◽  
Vol 59 (10) ◽  
pp. 841 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. A. Radford ◽  
I. D. Marsden ◽  
A. G. Jeffs

Commercial aquaculture of crustaceans depends on the development of artificial diets, the effectiveness of which is usually determined from captive growth experiments. As an alternative, this research examines the use of a physiological measure of energy expenditure, the specific dynamic action (SDA) using closed box respirometry to determine the potential of different carbohydrates for artificial diets for the spiny lobster Jasus edwardsii. Juvenile lobsters were provided with meals composed of glycogen, maltose, sucrose, glucose, or fructose in a gelatine base, or with gels of the algal carbohydrates, agar, alginate and carrageenan. Lobsters feeding on most of the general carbohydrate diets elicited a typical SDA response with an immediate rise in oxygen consumption, which was not exhibited in unfed controls. Lobsters fed algal carbohydrates did not show a SDA response but did show an increase in ammonia excretion. It is concluded that spiny lobsters are able to use carbohydrates as part of their diet and the SDA provides a useful means of rapidly determining which carbohydrates may be best used in formulated diets. It is suggested that the SDA would be a quick and effective way to determine food digestibility of components or ingredients used in crustacean aquaculture.


1991 ◽  
Vol 48 (11) ◽  
pp. 2212-2222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-François Doyon ◽  
Christiane Hudon ◽  
Roderick Morin ◽  
F. G. Whoriskey Jr.

This study characterizes the seasonal anadromous movements of a brook charr population and compares its biological and energetic characteristics with charr spending summer in freshwaters. Downstream movements monitored at a counting fence over 3 yr were most intense in spring but occurred until fall and were positively correlated with rapid increases of water level. The timing of movements varied from year to year. Smaller charr were most subject to being swept downstream compared with freshwater residents, and most trout were concentrated near the mouth of the river. These patterns suggest that the downstream movements of charr in this system are passive. Upstream migrants had a higher condition factor and a lower tissue water content than freshwater residents, indicating that downstream movements result in a faster accumulation of energetic reserves during summer. However, the fortuitous character of anadromous migrations as well as the absence of differences in the biological characteristics (growth, size at maturity, fecundity, egg size) suggests that anadromous and resident fish belong to a single population whose yearly migrant component could be randomly determined.


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