freshwater teleost
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2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 413-421
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Yamakami Camilo ◽  
Claucia Aparecida Honorato ◽  
Rudã Fernandes Brandão Santos ◽  
Ive Marchioni Avilez ◽  
Luciana Cristina De Almeida ◽  
...  

The objective of this work was to evaluate the effect of macronutrients and essential amino acids on digestive process of the freshwater teleost Matrinxã (Brycon amazonicus). Juveniles were fed with diets containing starch plus free amino acids or oil plus free amino acids for 15 days. These fish were compared with others fed with diets containing starch or oil without addition of free amino acids. After the experimental span, 12 fish from each treatment were randomly sampled to collect stomach, pyloric cecum, anterior and posterior intestine for assaying digestive enzymes activity. Increase of gastric proteolysis due to dietary amino acids were observed. Amylolytic, proteolytic and lipolytic activities in intestine sections were also positive related to dietary amino acids. However, proteolytic and lipolytic activities in pyloric cecum were not responsive to dietary changes. Moreover, the absence of starch in the diets resulted in decrease of amylolysis, and very low levels of oil did not change the lipolytic activity. In conclusion, activities of amylase, protease and lipase of Matrinxãare selectively responsive to addition of free essential amino acids concerning the gut section.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (11) ◽  
pp. e0259741
Author(s):  
Ena Kaneko ◽  
Hinako Sato ◽  
Shoji Fukamachi

The three-chamber experiment, in which one test animal can choose between two animals placed in physically inaccessible compartments, is a widely adopted strategy for studying sexual preference in animals. Medaka, a small freshwater teleost, is an emerging model for dissecting the neurological/physiological mechanisms underlying mate choice for which intriguing findings have been accumulating. The three-chamber strategy has rarely been adopted in this species; therefore, here we investigated its validity using medaka colour variants that mate assortatively. First, a total of 551 movies, in which a test male and two choice females interacted for 30 min under a free-swimming condition, were manually analysed. The sexual preference of the males, calculated as a courtship ratio, was highly consistent between human observers (r > 0.96), supporting the objectivity of this manual-counting strategy. Second, we tested two types of three-chamber apparatuses, in which choice fish were presented in either a face-to-face or side-by-side location. Test fish (regardless of sex) spent most of the time associating with choice fish in the compartments. However, their sexual preference, calculated as an association ratio, was poorly reproduced when the locations of the choice fish were swapped. Third, the sexual preferences of males quantified using the manual-counting and either of the three-chamber strategies did not correlate (r = 0.147 or 0.297). Hence, we concluded that, even for individuals of a species like medaka, which spawn every day, sexual preference could not be reliably evaluated using the three-chamber strategy. Optimization of the protocol may solve this problem; however, the explanation for the observation that animals that are ready for spawning persist with never-accessible mating partners must be reconsidered.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Derek J. Sauer ◽  
Britt J. Heidinger ◽  
Jeffrey D. Kittilson ◽  
Alec R. Lackmann ◽  
Mark E. Clark

AbstractAlthough the pace of senescence varies considerably, the physiological systems that contribute to different patterns of senescence are not well understood, especially in long-lived vertebrates. Long-lived bony fish (i.e., Class Osteichthyes) are a particularly useful model for studies of senescence because they can readily be aged and exhibit some of the longest lifespans among vertebrates. In this study we examined the potential relationship between age and multiple physiological systems including: stress levels, immune function, and telomere length in individuals ranging in age from 2 to 99 years old in bigmouth buffalo (Ictiobus cyprinellus), the oldest known freshwater teleost fish. Contrary to expectation, we did not find any evidence for age-related declines in these physiological systems. Instead, older fish appeared to be less stressed and had greater immunity than younger fish, suggesting age-related improvements rather than declines in these systems. There was no significant effect of age on telomeres, but individuals that may be more stressed had shorter telomeres. Taken together, these findings suggest that bigmouth buffalo exhibit negligible senescence in multiple physiological systems despite living for nearly a century.


Parasite ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 72
Author(s):  
Larisa G. Poddubnaya ◽  
Alexander Zhokhov ◽  
David I. Gibson

This is the first study assessing the cytoarchitecture of the vitellarium of members of the freshwater, teleost-infecting lineage of blood-flukes (Aporocotylidae). The vitelline cytoarchitecture of two innominate species of Sanguinicola from freshwater fishes in Russia showed that vitelline cells at different stages of maturation are widely distributed throughout much of the body and are mixed with other cell types. The latter feature indicates that use of the term “follicular vitellarium” is inappropriate for species of this genus. An additional characteristic of the vitelline cells in these Sanguinicola spp. is their ability to form long, pseudopodia-like extensions of the peripheral cytoplasm that contact neighbouring vitelline cells and sarcoplasmic extensions, forming both heterologous and homologous intercellular junctions. Within the vitelline duct lumen, the cytoplasm of mature vitelline cells is filled with regular clusters (0.5–1.0 μm in diameter), comprising 10–30 vitelline globules, which have heterogeneous contents and electron-lucent lipid droplets (1.1–1.7 μm in diameter), but no apparent modifications of vitelline globules occur within the vitelline duct. The flattened, ciliated, epithelial lining of the common vitelline duct contains intra-epithelial nuclei, its luminal surface bears shallow lamellae and adjacent cells are adjoined by apical septate junctions. All of these observations, when compared to the marine Aporocotyle simplex, likely represent additional characteristics supporting the divergent evolutionary lineages of marine and freshwater aporocotylids.


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4881 (2) ◽  
pp. 349-360
Author(s):  
RODRIGO B. NARCISO ◽  
GILMAR PERBICHE-NEVES ◽  
REINALDO JOSÉ DA SILVA

A new species of the copepod genus Pseudovaigamus Amado, Ho & Rocha, 1984 is described herein based on parasitic adult females found attached to the gills of the freshwater teleost Pimelodus maculatus Lacepède, 1803, sampled in two tributaries (Veados and Paranapananema Rivers) of the Jurumirim Reservoir, Upper Paranapanema River, São Paulo State, Brazil. The new copepod was identified as an undescribed species of Pseudovaigamus because it shares with the type-species, Pseudovaigamus spinicephalus (Thatcher & Robertson, 1984), the combination of first leg with 2-segmented endopod, fourth leg with 3-segmented endopod and 2-segmented exopod, and cephalothorax armed with dorsolateral stylets (or retrostylets). However, the new copepod differs from its congener in having a trifid rostral spine, retrostylets with long spatulate process, 5-segmented antennule, and caudal rami simple or lacking any distal lobe. We erected a new species, Pseudovaigamus tridentatus n. sp.. It is the first report of a Pseudovaigamus found on a freshwater fish in Brazil.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao Du ◽  
Xiaoning Hong ◽  
Guangyi Fan ◽  
Xiaoyun Huang ◽  
Shuai Sun ◽  
...  

AbstractThe order Characiformes is one of the largest components of the freshwater teleost fauna inhabiting exclusively in South America and Africa with great ecological and economical significance. Yet, quite limited genomic resources are available to study this group and their transatlantic vicariance. In this study we present a chromosome-level genome assembly of the African pike (Hepsetus odoe), a representative member of the African Characiformes. To this end, we generated 119, 11, and 67 Gb reads using the single tube long fragment read (stLFR), Oxford Nanopore, and Hi-C sequencing technologies, respectively. We obtained an 862.1 Mb genome assembly with the contig and scaffold N50 of 347.4 kb and 25.8 Mb, respectively. Hi-C sequencing produced 29 chromosomes with 742.5 Mb, representing 86.1% of the genome. 24,314 protein-coding genes were predicted and 23,999 (98.7%) genes were functionally annotated. The chromosomal-scale genome assembly will be useful for functional and evolutionary studies of the African pike and promote the study of Characiformes speciation and evolution.


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