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1.
To establish whether family origin affects the response of the threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) to thermal acclimation, we examined the rates of feeding, growth, and food conversion, relative tissue and organ masses and activities of a mitochondrial and a glycolytic enzyme in pectoral and axial muscle of individually housed fish from six families during acclimation to 8 degrees C and 23 degrees C. Feeding rates differed among families but were consistently higher in warm-acclimated than cold-acclimated fish. Growth rates differed among families. In four families growth was greater at 8 degrees C; these families generally had higher conversion efficiencies at 8 degrees C than 23 degrees C. For two families, growth was greater at 23 degrees C than 8 degrees C and conversion efficiencies did not differ between 8 degrees C and 23 degrees C. Relative tissue and organ masses (percent axial muscle, hepatosomatic, gut and kidney indices) differed with gender and among families (hepatosomatic, gut and kidney indices) but little with acclimation status. In all families and in both muscles, activities of the mitochondrial enzyme, citrate synthase (CS), were increased by cold acclimation. Axial muscle levels of the glycolytic enzyme, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), were not affected by thermal acclimation or family origin, but were strongly correlated with the hepatosomatic index and axial muscle protein content. Pectoral muscle levels of LDH were affected by family origin which also influenced the response to thermal acclimation. Similar patterns were observed for specific activities and total muscle contents of these enzymes. Stickleback family origin influenced rates of feeding and growth and the thermal sensitivity of growth rates but not the compensatory increase in muscle CS levels with cold acclimation. The differing thermal sensitivities of growth could reflect distinct strategies for the timing of juvenile growth.  相似文献   

2.
There is a significant reduction in overall maximum power output of muscle at low temperatures due to reduced steady-state (i.e. maximum activation) power-generating capabilities of muscle. However, during cyclical locomotion, a further reduction in power is due to the interplay between non-steady-state contractile properties of muscle (i.e. rates of activation and relaxation) and the stimulation and the length-change pattern muscle undergoes in vivo. In particular, even though the relaxation rate of scup red muscle is slowed greatly at cold temperatures (10°C), warm-acclimated scup swim with the same stimulus duty cycles at cold as they do at warm temperature, not affording slow-relaxing muscle any additional time to relax. Hence, at 10°C, red muscle generates extremely low or negative work in most parts of the body, at all but the slowest swimming speeds.Do scup shorten their stimulation duration and increase muscle relaxation rate during cold acclimation? At 10°C, electromyography (EMG) duty cycles were 18% shorter in cold-acclimated scup than in warm-acclimated scup. But contrary to the expectations, the red muscle did not have a faster relaxation rate, rather, cold-acclimated muscle had an approximately 50% faster activation rate. By driving cold- and warm-acclimated muscle through cold- and warm-acclimated conditions, we found a very large increase in red muscle power during swimming at 10°C. As expected, reducing stimulation duration markedly increased power output. However, the increased rate of activation alone produced an even greater effect. Hence, to fully understand thermal acclimation, it is necessary to examine the whole system under realistic physiological conditions.  相似文献   

3.
The acclimation temperature of carp does not affect the amount of cytochrome c oxidase per mg mitochondrial protein as revealed from the reduced-minus-oxidized difference spectra of red muscle mitochondria from cold- and warm-acclimated carp. There are no differences between cold- and warm-acclimated fish in the substrate binding properties of the enzyme as judged from the Km values for cytochrome c at 30 degrees C (3.34 +/- 0.ee microM, acclimation temperature 10 degrees C and 3.55 +/- 0.31 microM, acclimation temperature 30 degrees C). The molar activities of the enzyme, however, differ for both acclimation temperatures: when intercalated in the 10 degrees C-acclimated mitochondrial membrane, the enzyme can catalyze the oxidation of 117.6 +/- 17.2 mol ferrocytochrome c/s per mol heme a as compared with 85.6 +/- 17.2 in the 30 degrees C-acclimated membrane (experimental temperature 30 degrees C). Correspondingly, higher specific activities of the succinate oxidase system are observed in mitochondria from cold-acclimated carp as compared with those obtained from warm-acclimated carp. The results indicate that cold acclimation of the eurythermic carp is accompanied by a partial compensation of the acute effect of decreasing temperature on the activity of cytochrome c oxidase in red muscle mitochondria. Based on the temperature-induced lipid adaptation reported for carp red muscle mitochondria (Wodtke, E. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 640, 698--709), it is concluded that during thermal acclimation the molar activity of cytochrome c oxidase is controlled by viscotropic regulation. The results fit to the conception that cardiolipin constitutes a lipid shell (annulus) surrounding the oxidase within the native membrane, but that it is the bilayer fluidity and not the annular fluidity which determines the activity of cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

4.
Groups of common carp were acclimated to either 10°C or 28°C for 6 weeks. Fish were then exercised at 10°C or 20°C, and the critical swimming speed (fatigue velocity) was measured. At 10°C, cold-acclimated carp were capable of significantly higher swimming speeds. When exercised at 20°C. however, the situation was reversed, and warm-acclimated carp exhibited improved swimming ability. These results provide direct evidence that acclimation of the contractile proteins is beneficial across a wide temperature range. Following acclimation to low environmental temperatures the critical swimming speed exhibited a Q10 of only 1.1 for the temperature range 10–20°C. compared to a value of 2.9 for fish acclimated to the higher temperature.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of acclimation of striped bass to cold (5 degrees C) and warm (25 degrees C) temperatures upon ultrastructural features of white axial skeletal muscle are quantified. Surface density of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) increased by almost 30%, and SR volume density increased by about 20% during cold acclimation. Proliferation of SR suggests an increase in available SR surface for re-sequestration of Ca2+ and a decrease in diffusion path length for Ca2+ during cold acclimation. Average cross-sectional areas and cross-sectional perimeters of myofibrils situated in the center of muscle fibers decreased during cold acclimation by approximately 20% and 11%, respectively. Additionally, average major and minor axes of ellipses fit to central myofibrillar cross-sections decreased by approximately 12% and 8%, respectively, during cold acclimation. These measurements define a decrease in average myofibrillar diameter and suggest a decrease in diffusion path length for Ca2+ to and from myofibrillar activation sites. Measurements of peripheral myofibrils that had elongated profiles in cross-sections indicate that maximum profile length of these myofibrils decreases by about 17%. Peripheral myofibrils may break up into smaller myofibrils with more rounded cross-sectional profiles during cold acclimation. SR Ca2+-ATPase of white axial muscle was also measured in unfractionated homogenates and in crude SR-enriched subcellular fractions from cold- and warm-acclimated striped bass. No difference in SR Ca2+-ATPase activity per g wet weight was observed between cold- and warm-acclimated animals. Lack of increase in SR Ca2+-ATPase per g wet weight, despite a significant proliferation of SR, probably results in a decrease in average Ca2+-ATPase pump density within the SR membrane during cold acclimation. Thus, compensation for decreased diffusion coefficient of Ca2+ during cold acclimation appears due to the combined effects of proliferation of SR surface density and a decrease in average myofibrillar diameter.  相似文献   

6.
Cold temperature generally induces an enhancement of oxidative capacities, a greater content of intracellular lipids, and a remodeling of lipids in biological membranes. These physiological responses may pose a heightened risk of lipid peroxidation (LPO), while warm temperature could result in greater risk of LPO since rates involving reactive oxygen species and LPO will be elevated. The current study examines responses of the glutathione system of antioxidant defense after temperature acclimation. We measured total glutathione (tGSH), and protein levels of GPx1, GPx4, and GST (cardiac and skeletal muscles), and enzymatic activity (skeletal muscle) of glutathione-dependent antioxidants (GPx, GPx4, and GST) in tissues from striped bass (Morone saxatilis) acclimated for six weeks to 7 °C or 25 °C. tGSH of cardiac muscle from cold-acclimated animals was 1.2-times higher than in warm-bodied counterparts, but unchanged with temperature acclimation in skeletal muscle. A second low molecular weight antioxidant, ascorbate was 1.4- and 1.5-times higher in cardiac and skeletal muscle, respectively in warm- than cold-acclimated animals. Despite 1.2-times higher oxidative capacities (as indicated by citrate synthase activity), in skeletal muscle from cold- versus warm-acclimated fish, levels and activities of antioxidant enzymes were similar between acclimation groups. Lipid peroxidation products (as indicated by TBARS), normalized to tissue wet weight, were more than 2-times higher in skeletal muscle from cold- than warm-acclimated animals, however, when normalized to phospholipid content there was no statistical difference between acclimation groups. Our results demonstrate that the physiological changes, associated with acclimation to low temperature in the eurythermal striped bass, are not accompanied by an enhanced antioxidant defense in the glutathione-dependent system.  相似文献   

7.
The endurance of threespine sticklebacks, Gasterosteus aculeatus , swimming with pectoral fin locomotion at 20° C in a laboratory flume was measured. Each trial lasted a maximum of 480 min. At a speed of 4 body lengths per sec (L s−1) all fish were still swimming at the end of the trial, but endurance decreased at higher speeds. At speeds of 5 or 6 L s−1 (20–30 cm s−1) a few fish still maintained labriform locomotion for the 480 min. However, at a speed of 7 L s−1 all fish furled their pectoral fins and used body and caudal fin propulsion but fatigued rapidly. During sustained swimming, fish could cover distances of 6 km or more. No significant differences between males and females were found.  相似文献   

8.
The activity and properties of phosphofructokinase (PFK) in tissues of horse mackerel which was swimming at burst regimen for 5 min and at cruiser one for 60 min have been investigated. In white muscle the PFK activity increased 1.6-fold after burst swimming and Hill's coefficient rose as well and decreased 3-fold after cruiser one. Swimming did not change the half-maximal saturation constant for both substrates and inhibition constants for ATP and citrate. In the preparations from white muscle of fish which were stimulated by burst swimming the PFK activity at physiological pH values (6.0-7.0) was higher comparing with one from the control group and after cruiser swimming. Incubation of preparations at 45 degrees C decreased the activity of PFK in control and cruiser swimming groups (to 61-67% of initial level) and increased it after burst swimming (1.3-fold). The mechanisms involving in stable modification of PFK under different swimming regimens are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Rates of incorporation of 1-14C-oleic (18:1n9), -linoleic (18:2n6), and -linolenic (18:3n3) acids into individual phosphatides were determined in isolated hepatocytes from cold (5 degrees C)- and warm (20 degrees C)-acclimated rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri. Fatty acid incorporation into phosphatidylcholine (PC) exceeded that into all other phospholipids, but at assay and acclimation temperatures of 5 degrees C, incorporation into phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) was generally intermediate between that of PC and the remaining phosphatides. Specific radioactivities (ratios of percentage isotope incorporation-to-mole percentage of phosphatide) were consistently less than one for both PC and PE, and greater than one for phosphatidic acid (PA), lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC), phosphatidylserine (PS), and cardiolipin (CL). For PS, specific radioactivities were greater in cold- than warm-acclimated trout, and greater at 5 degrees C than 20 degrees C. Rates of oleate incorporation were generally higher, and rates of incorporation of 18:2 and 18:3 lower in cold- than warm-acclimated trout. Most phospholipids demonstrated a clear preference for the incorporation of 18:2 when assayed at 20 degrees C; however, at 5 degrees C the incorporation of 18:2 was reduced and 18:3 was generally the preferred substrate. A reduction in assay temperature from 20 degrees C to 5 degrees C also shifted the incorporation of 18:2 away from PC into PS and PA. These data were interpreted to indicate 1) a cold-induced activation of PS metabolism, possibly resulting in elevated levels of PE; 2) lower rates of general acyl group turnover in animals acclimated to 5 degrees C than 20 degrees C; 3) a specificity to the acclimation response that favors the incorporation at cold temperatures of polyunsaturated fatty acids, but not the parent acids from which they are derived; and 4) the participation of a deacylation-reacylation cycle in the metabolism of phospholipids, particularly at cold temperatures.  相似文献   

10.
Populations of the common killifish Fundulus heteroclitus are found along a latitudinal temperature gradient in habitats with high thermal variability. The objectives of this study were to assess the effects of temperature and population of origin on killifish swimming performance (assessed as critical swimming speed, U(crit)). Acclimated fish from northern and southern killifish populations demonstrated a wide zone (from 7 degrees to 33 degrees C) over which U(crit) showed little change with temperature, with performance declining significantly only at lower temperatures. Although we observed significant differences in swimming performance between a northern and a southern population of killifish in one experiment, with northern fish having an approximately 1.5-fold-greater U(crit) than southern fish across all acclimation temperatures, we were unable to replicate this finding in other populations or collection years, and performance was consistently high across all populations and at both low (7 degrees C) and high (23 degrees C) acclimation temperatures. The poor swimming performance of southern killifish from a single collection year was correlated with low muscle [glycogen] rather than with other indicators of fuel stores or body condition. Killifish acclimated to 18 degrees C and acutely challenged at temperatures of 5 degrees , 18 degrees , 25 degrees , or 34 degrees C showed modest thermal sensitivity of U(crit) between 18 degrees and 34 degrees C, with performance declining substantially at 5 degrees C. Thus, much of the zone of relative thermal insensitivity of swimming performance is intrinsic in this species rather than acquired as a result of acclimation. These data suggest that killifish are broadly tolerant of changing temperatures, whether acute or chronic, and demonstrate little evidence of local adaptation in endurance swimming performance in populations from different thermal habitats.  相似文献   

11.
Temperature acclimation may be a critical component of the locomotor physiology and ecology of ectothermic animals, particularly those living in eurythermal environments. Several studies of fish report striking acclimation of biochemical and kinetic properties in isolated muscle. However, the relatively few studies of whole-animal performance report variable acclimation responses. We test the hypothesis that different types of whole-animal locomotion will respond differently to temperature acclimation, probably due to divergent physiological bases of locomotion. We studied two cyprinid fishes, tinfoil barbs (Puntius schwanenfeldii) and river barbels (Barbus barbus). Study fish were acclimated to either cold or warm temperatures for at least 6 wk and then assayed at four test temperatures for three types of swimming performance. We measured voluntary swimming velocity to estimate routine locomotor behavior, maximum fast start velocity to estimate anaerobic capacity, and critical swimming velocity to estimate primarily aerobic capacity. All three performance measures showed some acute thermal dependence, generally a positive correlation between swimming speed and test temperature. However, each performance measure responded quite differently to acclimation. Critical speeds acclimated strongly, maximum speeds not at all, and voluntary speeds uniquely in each species. Thus we conclude that long-term temperature exposure can have very different consequences for different types of locomotion, consistent with our hypothesis. The data also address previous hypotheses that predict that polyploid and eurythermal fish will have greater acclimation abilities than other fish, due to increased genetic flexibility and ecological selection, respectively. Our results conflict with these predictions. River barbels are eurythermal polyploids and tinfoil barbs stenothermal diploids, yet voluntary swimming acclimated strongly in tinfoil barbs and minimally in river barbels, and acclimation was otherwise comparable.  相似文献   

12.
Power produced by red myotomal muscles of fish during cruise swimming appears seldom maximized, so we sought to investigate whether economy may impact or dominate muscle function. We measured cost of transport (COT) using oxygen consumption and the strain trajectories and electromyographic activity of red muscle measured at anterior (ANT) and posterior (POST) locations while Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) swam steadily at speeds between 0.3 and 1.0 body lengths (BL) s(-1). We then measured the power produced by isolated segments of red muscle when activated either as in the swimming cod or such that maximal net power was produced. Patterns of activation during swimming were not optimal for power output and were highly variable between tail beats, particularly at the ANT location and at slow swim speeds. Muscle strain amplitude did not increase until swimming speed reached 0.9 (ANT) versus 0.5 (POST) BL s(-1). These limited power to only 53% (ANT) and 71% (POST) of maximum at slower swim speeds and to 70%-80% of maximum at high swim speeds. COT (resting metabolism subtracted) was minimal at the slowest swim speed, surprisingly, where power was most impaired by activation and strain. Thus, production of powered forces for maneuverability/stability appeared to greatly impact red muscle function during cruise swimming in cod, particularly at slow speeds and in ANT muscle.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of acclimation temperature (30 degrees, 20 degrees, and 15 degrees C) and swimming speed on the aerobic fuel use of the Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus; 8-10 g, 8-9-cm fork length) were investigated using a respirometric approach. As acclimation temperature was decreased from 30 degrees C to 15 degrees C, resting oxygen consumption (Mo2) and carbon dioxide excretion (Mco2) decreased approximately twofold, while nitrogenous waste excretion (ammonia-N plus urea-N) decreased approximately fourfold. Instantaneous aerobic fuel usage was calculated from respiratory gas exchange. At 30 degrees C, resting Mo2 was fueled by 42% lipids, 27% carbohydrates, and 31% protein. At 15 degrees C, lipid use decreased to 21%, carbohydrate use increased greatly to 63%, and protein use decreased to 16%. These patterns at 30 degrees C and 15 degrees C in tilapia paralleled fuel use previously reported in rainbow trout acclimated to 15 degrees C and 5 degrees C, respectively. Temperature also had a pronounced effect on critical swimming speed (UCrit). Tilapia acclimated to 30 degrees C had a UCrit of 5.63+/-0. 06 body lengths/s (BL/s), while, at 20 degrees C, UCrit was significantly lower at 4.21+/-0.14 BL/s. Tilapia acclimated to 15 degrees C were unable or unwilling to swim. As tilapia swam at greater speeds, Mo2 increased exponentially; Mo2min and Mo2max were 5.8+/-0.6 and 21.2+/-1.5 micromol O2/g/h, respectively. Nitrogenous waste excretion increased to a lesser extent with swimming speed. At 30 degrees C, instantaneous protein use while swimming at 15 cm/s ( approximately 1.7 BL/s) was 23%, and at UCrit (5.6 BL/s), protein use dropped slightly to 17%. During a 48-h swim at 25 cm/s (2.7 BL/s, approximately 50% UCrit), Mo2 and urea excretion remained unchanged, while ammonia excretion more than doubled by 24 h and remained elevated 24 h later. These results revealed a shift to greater reliance on protein as an aerobic fuel during prolonged swimming.  相似文献   

14.
Electromyography was used to determine the functional roles of the axial musculature in striped bass and bluefish at imposed swimming velocities. The lateral red muscle powers propulsive movements at all sustainable swimming speeds in both species. The amplitude and frequency of EMG's from the red muscle grade with increasing swimming velocity. The white muscle, forming the main mass of the myotome, is reserved for high-speed burst swimming above maximum sustainable speeds. The proportion of the myotome occupied by the red muscle at the level of the caudal peduncle is 10.9% and 18.6% for the striped bass and the bluefish respectively.  相似文献   

15.
We examined the burst swimming performance of two Antarctic fishes, Trematomus bernacchii and T. centronotus, at five temperatures between -1 degrees C and 10 degrees C. As Antarctic fishes are considered one of the most cold specialised and stenothermal of all ectotherms, we predicted they would possess a narrow thermal performance breadth for burst swimming and a correlative decrease in performance at high temperatures. Burst swimming was assessed by videotaping swimming sequences with a 50-Hz video camera and analysing the sequences frame-by-frame to determine maximum velocity, the distance moved throughout the initial 200 ms, and the time taken to reach maximum velocity. In contrast to our prediction, we found both species possessed a wide thermal performance breadth for burst swimming. Although maximum swimming velocity for both T. bernacchii and T. centronotus was significantly highest at 6 degrees C, maximum velocity at all other test temperatures was less than 20% lower. Thus, it appears that specialisation to a highly stable and cold environment is not necessarily associated with a narrow thermal performance breadth for burst swimming in Antarctic fish. We also examined the ability of the Antarctic fish Pagothenia borchgrevinki to acclimate their burst-swimming performance to different temperatures. We exposed P. borchgrevinki to either -1 degrees C or 4 degrees C for 4 weeks and tested their burst-swimming performance at four temperatures between -1 degrees C and 10 degrees C. Burst-swimming performance of Pagothenia borchgrevinki was unaffected by exposure to either -1 degrees C or 4 degrees C for 4 weeks. Maximum swimming velocity of both acclimation groups was thermally independent over the total temperature range of 1 degrees C to 10 degrees C. Therefore, the loss of any capacity to restructure the phenotype and an inability to thermally acclimate swimming performance appears to be associated with inhabiting a highly stable thermal environment.  相似文献   

16.
A whole-lake acoustic telemetry array was utilized to monitor the three-dimensional position of 20 largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides). Code division multiple access (CDMA) technology enabled the simultaneous monitoring of the 20 transmitters (equipped with pressure and temperature sensors) at 15 s intervals with sub-meter accuracy. Fish were monitored between November 2003 and April 2004 to evaluate the behaviour of fish across different temporal and spatial scales. The distance moved by largemouth bass, assessed both on a daily and hourly basis, varied by season and was positively correlated with water temperature. For example, daily movement rates were 2.69 ± 1.45 km/day in mid November (average daily water temperature 5.9°C), 2.24 ± 0.73 km/day in early January (5.1°C), and 7.28 ± 2.62 km/day in mid April (7.7°C). Interestingly, daily movement rates varied by as much as 25 fold among individual fish. Visualization of fish swimming paths revealed that whereas some fish occupied discrete areas and made only localized movements, other individuals made lengthier journeys covering much of the lake in periods of as little as one day. Analysis of fish behaviour at a finer temporal scale revealed that during the winter, fish spend more than 95% of their time swimming at speeds less than 0.1 m/s (0.07 ± 0.24 m/s). During late fall, and especially in spring, swimming speeds were higher with mean swimming speeds of 0.11 ± 0.27 m/s and 0.19 ± 0.29 m/s, respectively. When the telemetry dataset was queried to simulate 24 h manual tracking intervals, it was clear that manual tracking data would not have been representative of actual daily movement rates, underestimating daily movement and swimming speeds by at least 75 fold. This study identifies the importance of evaluating fish activity at multiple spatial (whole lake to sub-meter position) and temporal (seasonal to seconds) scales and illustrates the potential of CDMA telemetry to yield such data.  相似文献   

17.
Two freshwater populations and one marine population (Baltic Sea) of threespine stickeback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) from Northeastern Germany were studied with regard to locomotory capacity: sustained swimming performance, activities of key enzymes in axial muscle, pectoral fin muscle and heart, and morphology. We postulated that life history differences between migratory Baltic Sea and resident freshwater populations could have led to a divergence in their locomotory capacity. The activity of citrate synthase (CS) in pectoral muscle correlated with critical swimming speed. Critical swimming speed, aerobic and anaerobic capacity of the pectoral fin muscle were population-specific. The Baltic Sea sticklebacks had a higher locomotory capacity (activity of CS in pectoral muscle, critical swimming speed) than sticklebacks of one freshwater population. However, another freshwater population expressed a similar locomotory capacity as the Baltic Sea population. In addition, Baltic Sea sticklebacks had a greater mass and lower anaerobic capacity of the pectoral fin muscle than the freshwater sticklebacks. The results are interpreted as an indication of a proceeding divergence between marine and resident freshwater populations and between freshwater populations of G. aculeatus originating from marine ancestors. The migratory Baltic Sea sticklebacks had better morphological prerequisites for sustained swimming than both freshwater populations, but there was no general difference in the locomotory capacity between marine and freshwater sticklebacks. However, their morphology could favour a more effective locomotion in the Baltic Sea sticklebacks.  相似文献   

18.
Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and brook trout (or charr, Salvelinus fontinalis) display different rostral-caudal patterns of power production by the red or aerobic muscle during steady swimming. The anterior muscle of rainbow trout produces much less power for swimming than the posterior, while in brook trout there is no variation in power output. To determine if red muscle recruitment is associated with anterior-posterior patterns of power production, electromyography (EMG) was used to record red muscle activity at three body positions across a range of swimming speeds in fish of each species. The initial recruitment of the anterior red muscle in swimming rainbow trout was predicted to lag behind, i.e. occur at higher speeds, that of the posterior due to the variation in power production, but no variation in recruitment was expected for brook trout. Burst of red muscle EMG activity occurring with each tailbeat was analyzed for frequency (tailbeat frequency), duty cycle (DC) (duration of burst relative to the period of the tailbeat) and burst intensity (BI) (magnitude of the measured EMG activity). Brook trout swam with higher tailbeat frequencies and longer values of DC than rainbow trout. Both species showed a pattern of longitudinal variation in DC, with longer DC values in the anterior red muscle. BI also differed significantly along the length of rainbow trout but not brook trout. In the former, BI of anterior muscle was significantly less than the posterior at lower steady swimming speeds. The EMG data suggest that power production and muscle recruitment are related. In rainbow trout, where there is longitudinal variation in muscle power output, there are also significant rostral-caudal differences in red muscle recruitment.  相似文献   

19.
The mating system of eastern mosquito fish (Gambusia holbrooki) is dominated by male sexual coercion, where all matings are forced and females never appear to cooperate and actively avoid all attempts. Previous research has shown that male G. holbrooki offer a model system for examining the benefits of reversible thermal acclimation for reproductive success, but examining the benefits to female avoidance behaviour has been difficult. In this study, we examined the ability of non-male-deprived female G. holbrooki to avoid forced-coercive matings following acclimation to either 18 or 30 degrees C for six weeks (12h light:12h dark photoperiod). Thermal acclimation of burst and sustained swimming performance was also assessed, as these traits are likely to underlie their ability to avoid forced matings. There was no influence of thermal acclimation on the burst swimming performance of female G. holbrooki over the range 18-30 degrees C; however, sustained swimming performance was significantly lower in the warm- than the cool-acclimation group. For mating behaviour, we tested the hypothesis that acclimation would enhance the ability of female G. holbrooki to avoid forced matings at their host acclimation temperature relative to females acclimated to another environment. However, our hypothesis was not supported. The rate of copulations was almost three times greater for females acclimated to 30 degrees C than 18 degrees C when tested at 30 degrees C, indicating that they possess the ability to alter their avoidance behaviour to 'allow' more copulations in some environments. Coupled with previous studies, female G. holbrooki appear to have greater control on the outcome of coercive mating attempts than previously considered and can alter their propensity to receive forced matings following thermal acclimation. The significance of this change in female mating-avoidance behaviours with thermal acclimation remains to be explored.  相似文献   

20.
Both activation and relaxation times of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss red muscle were shorter in parr than in older juveniles. Furthermore, parr red muscle had a faster maximum shortening velocity than that of older fish, as estimated with the force-clamp technique. Parr swam with higher tailbeat frequencies and lower tailbeat amplitude than did older fish across a range of length-specific steady swimming speeds. The developmental shift in contraction kinetics of red muscle and steady swimming kinematics was associated with a reduction from two or three myosin heavy chain isoforms in parr to one in older juveniles. This transition provides a mechanism to explain the variations in muscle contraction kinetics and swimming performance.  相似文献   

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