Institute of Marine Research, Matredal, Norway; Aquatic Animal Health Group, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Australia.
Aquatic Animal Health Group, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Australia.
Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol. 2019 May;231:30-38. doi: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2019.01.012. Epub 2019 Jan 25.
The most capricious environmental variable in aquatic habitats, dissolved O, is fundamental to the fitness and survival of fish. Using swim tunnel respirometry we test how acute exposure to reduced O levels, similar to those commonly encountered by fish in crowded streams and on commercial aquaculture farms, affect metabolic rate and swimming performance in Atlantic salmon of three size classes: 0.2, 1.0 and 3.5 kg. Exposure to 45-55% dissolved O saturation substantially reduced the aerobic capacity and swimming performance of salmon of all sizes. While hypoxia did not affect standard metabolic rate, it caused a significant decrease in maximum metabolic rate, resulting in reduced absolute and factorial aerobic scope. The most pronounced changes were observed in the smallest fish, where critical swimming speed was reduced from 91 to 70 cm s and absolute aerobic scope dropped by 62% relative to the same measurement in normoxia. In normoxia, absolute critical swimming speed (U) increased with size, while relative U, measured in body lengths s, was highest in the small fish (3.5) and decreased with larger size (medium = 2.2). Mass specific metabolic rate and cost of transport were inversely related to size, with calculated metabolic scaling exponents of 0.65 for b and 0.78 for b. Metabolic O demand increased exponentially with current speed irrespective of fish size (R = 0.97-0.99). This work demonstrates that moderate hypoxia reduces the capacity for activity and locomotion in Atlantic salmon, with smaller salmon most vulnerable to hypoxic conditions. As warm and hypoxic conditions become more prevalent in aquatic environments worldwide, understanding local O budgets is critical to maximizing the welfare and survival of farmed and wild salmon.
在水生栖息地中,最变幻无常的环境变量溶解氧对鱼类的适应能力和生存至关重要。我们使用游泳隧道呼吸测量法测试了类似于鱼类在拥挤的溪流和商业水产养殖农场中经常遇到的急性低氧暴露,对三个大小类别的大西洋鲑鱼的代谢率和游泳性能有何影响:0.2、1.0 和 3.5 公斤。暴露于 45-55%溶解氧饱和度会大大降低所有大小鲑鱼的有氧能力和游泳性能。虽然低氧不会影响标准代谢率,但会导致最大代谢率显著降低,从而减少绝对和因子有氧范围。在最小的鱼中观察到最明显的变化,其临界游泳速度从 91 厘米/秒降低到 70 厘米/秒,绝对有氧范围比正常氧条件下的同一测量值下降了 62%。在正常氧条件下,绝对临界游泳速度(U)随体型增加而增加,而相对 U,以体长 s 表示,在小鱼中最高(3.5),随着体型增大而降低(中型=2.2)。比代谢率和运输成本与体型成反比,计算出的代谢缩放指数 b 为 0.65,b 为 0.78。无论鱼类大小如何,代谢 O 需求都随流速呈指数增长(R=0.97-0.99)。这项工作表明,适度的低氧会降低大西洋鲑鱼的活动和运动能力,而体型较小的鲑鱼对低氧条件最为脆弱。随着全球水生环境中温暖和低氧条件变得更加普遍,了解当地的 O 预算对于最大限度地提高养殖和野生鲑鱼的福利和生存至关重要。