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1.
Fish Physiol Biochem ; 44(1): 301-310, 2018 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29103172

ABSTRACT

For most temperate and arctic fish species, photoperiod is the key abiotic factor determining the onset of the reproductive cycle, and, for many species, constant long photoperiod seems to have an inhibitory effect. Yet, there is no knowledge about the effect of photoperiod on the onset of the reproductive cycle in northern pike males. The aim of this work was to investigate the potential inhibitory effect of constant long photoperiod on pike males. Batches of fish were reared in triplicate under natural simulated photoperiod (NSP) or constant long photoperiod (CP; 16L:8D) from 14 October 2013 to 14 March 2014. Fish were sampled three times (at the beginning of the photoperiod decrease, at the beginning of the temperature decrease and at the end of the temperature decrease). Morphological parameters, sexual steroid levels and spermatogenetic stages were investigated. Our results showed that CP partially inhibited gonadal development (gonado-somatic index or GSI, %; 2.5% under NSP and 1.2% under CP at day 152), spermatic development (96.2% of spermatozoa under NSP and 69.3% under CP at day 152) and the plasmatic levels of testosterone (7.20 ng/mL under NSP and 2.37 ng/mL under CP at day 152). In conclusion, photoperiod may be one of the determinant factors that control the onset of the reproductive cycle in pike males, but temperature and endogenous rhythms also need to be investigated.


Subject(s)
Esocidae/physiology , Photoperiod , Spermatogenesis/physiology , Testosterone/blood , Animals , Esocidae/blood , Male , Reproduction/physiology , Seasons , Testis/physiology , Testosterone/analogs & derivatives
2.
Neuro Endocrinol Lett ; 33 Suppl 3: 66-71, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23353846

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The objectives of the study were to compare the effects of Propiscin, 2-phenoxyethanol, clove oil and tricaine methane sulphonate (MS 222), anaesthetics frequently used in aquaculture. DESIGN: The haematological and biochemical blood profiles of pikeperch (Sander lucioperca L.) anesthetized with Propiscin (1.5 ml L-1), 2-phenoxyethanol (0.3 ml L-1), clove oil (33 mg L-1), MS 222 (150 mg L-1) and non-anesthetized control group were tested. Each tested group was divided into two subgroups, the first subgroup was sampled in anaesthesia 10 min after application of the anaesthetic and the second one live on 24h. RESULTS: The erythrocyte count and haematocrit was significantly decreased in 2-phenoxyethanol (24 h) compared with control group (CG). The mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration was significantly increased in 2-phenoxyethanol (10 min), Propiscin (10 min and 24 h) compared to CG. The 2-phenoxyethanol (10 min and 24 h), MS 222 (24 h), clove oil (24 h), and Propiscin (10 min and 24 h) showed significantly lower leukocyte count compared with CG. The level of glucose was significantly (p<0.05) elevated with MS 222 (10 min) and clove oil (10 min) compared with CG. The 2-phenoxyethanol (10 min and 24 h), MS 222 (24 h), clove oil (24 h), and Propiscin (24 h) showed significantly lower (p<0.01) ammonia levels compared with CG. The triacylglycerols was significantly decreased (p<0.01) with Propiscin (10 min and 24 h), MS 222 (24 h), clove oil (24 h) and with 2-phenoxyethanol (24 h) compared with CG. After 24 hours MS 222 (24 h) and Propiscin (24 h) anaesthesia, fish showed significantly lower (p<0.01) concentration of inorganic phosphate compared with CG. CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of this experiment, it appears that clove oil was associated with the lowest effects in pikeperch and therefore would be recommended as an alternative to MS 222, while Propiscin and 2-phenoxyethanol are not suitable for manipulation with pikeperch in aquaculture.


Subject(s)
Anesthetics/pharmacology , Anesthetics/toxicity , Aquaculture/methods , Esocidae/blood , Perches/blood , Aminobenzoates/toxicity , Animals , Blood Proteins/metabolism , Clove Oil/pharmacology , Clove Oil/toxicity , Erythrocyte Count , Ethylene Glycols/pharmacology , Ethylene Glycols/toxicity , Etomidate/pharmacology , Etomidate/toxicity , Hematocrit
3.
J Am Vet Med Assoc ; 236(10): 1104-8, 2010 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20470073

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE-To evaluate serial blood gas values and lactate concentrations in 3 fish species undergoing surgery and to compare blood lactate concentrations between fish that survived and those that died during the short-term postoperative period. DESIGN-Prospective cohort study. Animals-10 yellow perch, 5 walleye pike, and 8 koi. PROCEDURES-Blood samples were collected from each fish at 3 time points: before anesthesia, during anesthesia, and immediately after surgery. Blood gas values and blood lactate concentrations were measured. Fish were monitored for 2 weeks postoperatively. RESULTS-All walleye and koi survived, but 2 perch died. Blood pH significantly decreased in perch from before to during anesthesia, but increased back to preanesthesia baseline values after surgery. Blood Pco(2) decreased significantly in perch from before anesthesia to immediately after surgery, and also from during anesthesia to immediately after surgery, whereas blood Pco(2) decreased significantly in koi from before to during anesthesia. Blood Po(2) increased significantly in both perch and koi from before to during anesthesia, and also in koi from before anesthesia to immediately after surgery. For all 3 species, blood lactate concentrations increased significantly from before anesthesia to immediately after surgery. Blood lactate concentration (mean +/- SD) immediately after surgery for the 8 surviving perch was 6.06 +/- 1.47 mmol/L, which was significantly lower than blood lactate concentrations in the 2 nonsurviving perch (10.58 and 10.72 mmol/L). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE-High blood lactate concentrations following surgery in fish may be predictive of a poor short-term postoperative survival rate.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia, General/veterinary , Carps/blood , Esocidae/blood , Lactic Acid/blood , Perches/blood , Surgical Procedures, Operative/veterinary , Anesthesia, General/adverse effects , Animals , Blood Gas Analysis/veterinary , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Surgical Procedures, Operative/adverse effects
4.
Proc Biol Sci ; 277(1683): 843-51, 2010 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19923130

ABSTRACT

Chronic social stress diverts energy away from growth, reproduction and immunity, and is thus a potential driver of population dynamics. However, the effects of social stress on demographic density dependence remain largely overlooked in ecological theory. Here we combine behavioural experiments, physiology and population modelling to show in a top predator (pike Esox lucius) that social stress alone may be a primary driver of demographic density dependence. Doubling pike density in experimental ponds under controlled prey availability did not significantly change prey intake by pike (i.e. did not significantly change interference or exploitative competition), but induced a neuroendocrine stress response reflecting a size-dependent dominance hierarchy, depressed pike energetic status and lowered pike body growth rate by 23 per cent. Assuming fixed size-dependent survival and fecundity functions parameterized for the Windermere (UK) pike population, stress-induced smaller body size shifts age-specific survival rates and lowers age-specific fecundity, which in Leslie matrices projects into reduced population rate of increase (lambda) by 37-56%. Our models also predict that social stress flattens elasticity profiles of lambda to age-specific survival and fecundity, thus making population persistence more dependent on old individuals. Our results suggest that accounting for non-consumptive social stress from competitors and predators is necessary to accurately understand, predict and manage food-web dynamics.


Subject(s)
Esocidae/physiology , Models, Biological , Predatory Behavior/physiology , Stress, Psychological/physiopathology , Animals , Body Size/physiology , Body Weight/physiology , Esocidae/blood , Esocidae/growth & development , Female , Hydrocortisone/blood , Linear Models , Liver/physiology , Male , Organ Size/physiology , Population Growth , Thyroxine/blood , Triiodothyronine/blood
5.
Environ Toxicol Chem ; 24(6): 1436-43, 2005 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16117120

ABSTRACT

The high incidence of intersex roach (Rutilus rutilus) in some United Kingdom rivers that has been associated with exposure to sewage treatment works (STWs) effluent led us to hypothesize that top predator fish also may be affected by estrogenic chemicals, because they are likely to bioaccumulate lipophilic compounds through a predator-prey relationship. To investigate this possibility, pike (Esox lucius) were sampled both upstream and downstream of STWs and then examined for total estrogenic activity of their bile, as measured using a yeast-based estrogen assay to determine the degree of recent exposure of the pike to estrogens and vitellogenin induction, and for possible disruption of sexual development, as measured using histological analysis of the gonads. No evidence of severe disruption was found in the sampled fish, which came from 16 sampling sites that were representative of English rivers. However, 14% of pike were intersex, of which 15 of 16 showed patches of male germ cells among predominantly female gonadal tissue. The incidence of masculinization was independent of whether the pike had been sampled upstream or downstream of STWs. Although pike are gonochoristic, it is not known if this masculinization of presumptive female pike is normal or, instead, indicative of endocrine disruption. Vitellogenin concentrations were not elevated in male pike at sites either upstream or downstream of STWs. The results suggest that sexual disruption is not common in pike, a fish at the top of the food chain in the freshwaters of England.


Subject(s)
Esocidae/physiology , Estrogens/poisoning , Sewage/analysis , Animals , Bile/metabolism , Environmental Exposure , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Esocidae/blood , Esocidae/growth & development , Esocidae/metabolism , Estrogens/metabolism , Female , Male , Ovary/drug effects , Sewage/adverse effects , Testis/drug effects , United Kingdom , Vitellogenins/blood
6.
C R Acad Sci III ; 323(4): 365-72, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10803347

ABSTRACT

Variations in plasma thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) contents of pike, pikeperch, perch, bream and chub from a large reservoir (Pareloup, South of France) were investigated before and during the progressive emptying of the reservoir. Fish were caught by gill nets, except at the last time of emptying when controls were collected with landing nets. Both iodothyronine levels showed desynchronized seasonal cycles resulting in higher T3/T4 ratios in fish stressed by gill-netting in early summer. The aforementioned results principally emphasized the prevailing influence of the technique of catching on eliciting stress responses and subsequent thyroidal impairment in all five species. However, the much higher amounts of T4 and/or T3 observed in specimens caught in the later stages of draining gave evidence to suggest that the progressive alteration in habitat might also have indirectly affected the thyroidal status of these fish, this latter result leading to the consideration of fish plasma thyroid hormones as possible endocrine biomarkers of chronic perturbation.


Subject(s)
Carps/blood , Cyprinidae/blood , Esocidae/blood , Perches/blood , Seasons , Thyroxine/blood , Triiodothyronine/blood , Animals , Animals, Wild , Periodicity , Stress, Psychological , Temperature
7.
Mutat Res ; 421(2): 197-203, 1998 Nov 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9852993

ABSTRACT

Between 1957 and 1993, the Siberian Chemical Complex (Tomsk-7) located in the Tomsk region (Russia) regularly discharged radioactive liquid wastes into the Tom River which resulted in an extensive contamination of large territories with long lived radionuclides such as cesium-137 and strontium-90. In the summers of 1996 and 1997, Research Team of Siberian Medical University conducted biodosimetry and cytogenetic monitoring of pikes (Esox lucius) caught in the Tom River at various distances downstream from the Siberian Chemical Complex (SCC) using the micronucleus test and the gamma spectroscopy. Our findings demonstrated that the difference in frequency of micronucleated erythrocytes between the radiation-exposed fish caught downstream from the SCC and the controls was statistically significant (P < 0.01). Moreover, we found a good correlation between radiocesium concentration and micronucleated erythrocyte frequency in pikes. It was found that both the micronucleated erythrocyte frequency in pike blood and the level of the pike radiocesium concentration depended on the age of pikes. The micronucleated erythrocyte frequency gradually increased from the 1-year-old pikes to the over 20-year-old pikes. On the other hand, the average level of radiocesium concentration gradually increased from the 1-year-old pikes only up to the 10-year-old pikes. There is no correlation between radiocesium concentration and micronucleated erythrocyte frequency in the over 10-year-old pikes.


Subject(s)
Cesium Radioisotopes/adverse effects , Erythrocytes/radiation effects , Esocidae/blood , Micronuclei, Chromosome-Defective/radiation effects , Water Pollutants, Radioactive/adverse effects , Age Factors , Animals , Cesium Radioisotopes/analysis , Erythrocytes/ultrastructure , Female , Fresh Water/analysis , Male , Micronucleus Tests , Power Plants , Siberia , Water Pollutants, Radioactive/analysis
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