Schultz Eric T, Conover David O
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 75 N. Eagleville Road, University of Connecticut, Storrs. CT 06269-3042, USA e-mail:
Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY 11794-5000, USA, , , , , , US.
Oecologia. 1999 Jun;119(4):474-483. doi: 10.1007/s004420050810.
We experimentally tested the hypothesis that energy reserve depletion varies inversely with size in the fish Menidia menidia, an estuarine fish known to exhibit size-dependent winter mortality. Individuals in two size groups were starved at two winter temperatures (4°and 8°C) and sacrificed at a range of time intervals (up to 127 days). Lipid levels and lean tissue were analyzed to estimate somatic energy storage. As predicted, energy depletion was greater at high temperatures, and proportionally greater in small than in large fish. After 60 days of starvation at 4°C, small fish retained an average of 67% of their original energy reserves (vs 53% at 8°C), while large fish retained an average of 80% (vs 66% at 8°C). At 4°C, fish that were fed depleted their energy reserves as rapidly as unfed fish, but at 8°C, fish that were fed maintained reserves at higher levels than unfed fish. A high proportion of unfed fish (56% at 4°C, 27% at 8°C) died before they were to be sacrificed. Survival probability did not vary with size, nor was it influenced by the amount of energy reserves. The rate of energy depletion (equivalent to routine metabolic rate) decreased gradually over time, particularly in small fish. Routine metabolism did not conform to a single scaling relationship. Within each temperature-size group, the routine rate declined more rapidly than metabolically active mass (lean mass). At 8°C, the difference between size groups in energy depletion rate conformed closely to the expected allometry exponent of 0.8. In contrast, at 4°C, the estimated allometry exponent increased over the experiment (-0.19 to 2.5). We conclude that strategies to minimize energy loss may often modify bioenergetic scaling relationships.
在河口鱼类梅氏颈棱鲱(Menidia menidia)中,能量储备的消耗与体型大小呈反比,这种河口鱼类已知会表现出与体型相关的冬季死亡率。将两个体型组的个体在两个冬季温度(4°C和8°C)下进行饥饿处理,并在一系列时间间隔(长达127天)后处死。分析脂质水平和瘦组织以估计体细胞能量储存。正如预测的那样,高温下能量消耗更大,并且小鱼的能量消耗比例比大鱼更大。在4°C饥饿60天后,小鱼平均保留了其原始能量储备的67%(8°C时为53%),而大鱼平均保留了80%(8°C时为66%)。在4°C时,喂食的鱼消耗能量储备的速度与未喂食的鱼一样快,但在8°C时,喂食的鱼比未喂食的鱼保持更高水平的能量储备。很大一部分未喂食的鱼(4°C时为56%,8°C时为27%)在预定处死前死亡。生存概率与体型大小无关,也不受能量储备量的影响。能量消耗率(相当于常规代谢率)随时间逐渐下降,特别是在小鱼中。常规代谢并不符合单一的标度关系。在每个温度 - 体型组内,常规代谢率下降的速度比代谢活跃质量(瘦质量)更快。在8°C时,体型组之间能量消耗率的差异与预期的0.8异速生长指数密切相符。相比之下,在4°C时,估计的异速生长指数在实验过程中增加(从 -0.19到2.5)。我们得出结论,将能量损失降至最低的策略可能经常会改变生物能量学的标度关系。