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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Stuttgart, Arkansas » Harry K. Dupree Stuttgart National Aquaculture Research Cntr » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #266051

Title: Investigations into the relationship of post-stress metabolic rates and growth of fishes

Author
item BAROWSKI, NICHOLAS - University Of Arkansas
item LOCHMANN, STEVE - University Of Arkansas
item Fuller, Adam
item HAUKENES, ALF - University Of Arkansas

Submitted to: Annual Meeting of Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 3/16/2011
Publication Date: 3/16/2011
Citation: Barowski, N.A., Lochmann, S.E., Fuller, S.A., Haukenes, A.H. 2011. Investigations into the relationship of post-stress metabolic rates and growth of fishes [abstract]. Annual Meeting of Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology, January 3-7, 2011, Salt Lake City, Utah. 51(Suppl. 1):e.162.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: The objective of this study was to determine if respirometry indices of fish following a stressor correspond with growth. On four occasions over a period of one month, oxygen consumption rates of 16 hybrid striped bass families were measured following a standardized handling stressor. Groups of 10 fish from each family were netted, held out of water for 30-s, placed into the respirometer, and oxygen consumption rates were recorded for 90-min. Lengths and weights of individual fish were recorded after each test and relative growth rates, instantaneous growth rates, daily increase in length, and relative condition factors determined. The mean weight adjusted MO2 (mg O2.g0.79-1.h-1) for the first and last 30 min of measurement, the difference between these means, and the slope of MO2 values for the final 70 min were used to characterize the metabolic responses following the stressor. No differences among families were observed for relative growth rate, instantaneous growth rates, or daily increase in length over the course of this study. However, a significant difference in relative condition factors did exist among families and a significant correlation between the slope of MO2 over the final 70 minutes and relative condition factors were observed. Through further investigation of these relationships, respirometry may prove useful in characterizing phenotypic variation associated with recovery from stress in fishes and its relationship with growth.