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1.
Effect of temperature on swimming performance of sea bass juveniles   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
At four temperatures ( T= 15, 20, 25 and 28° C) swimming performance of Dicentrarchus labrax was significantly correlated with total length (23–43 mm L T); r2=0.623–0.829). The relative critical swimming speed ( RU crit= U crit L T−1), where U crit is the critical swimming speed, was constant throughout the L T range studied. The significant effect of temperature on the relative critical swimming speed was described binomially: RU crit=−0.0323T2+ 1.578 T −10.588 (r2=1). The estimated maximum RU crit (8.69 L T s−1) was achieved at 24.4° C, and the 90% performance level was estimated between 19.3 and 29.6° C.  相似文献   

2.
H. Kruuk    P. T. Taylor    G. A. T. Mom 《Journal of Zoology》1997,241(4):689-697
The effects of water temperature (Tw) on core body temperature (Tb) and foraging behaviour were studied in four free-ranging and one captive otter Lutra lutra in NE Scotland. The free-ranging animals were observed in and around two freshwater lochs, and measurements were made of Tw (2–16°C), Tb at the beginning and end of swimming bouts, lengths of swimming bouts, and dive times and intervals. Tb ranged from 35.9 to 40.4°C (mean 38.1°C). At the beginning of a period of activity and of a swimming bout. Tb rose significantly; during swimming it fell at a rate of 2.3°C/h, independent of Tw. Dive intervals were longer in colder waters, but this was probably due to other, seasonal environmental changes (perhaps water level). Tw had no significant effect on length of swimming bouts or on Tb. Although otters entered water with increased Tb, they exited when Tb was not significantly different from the mean resting Tb. The data suggest that otters maintain Tb irrespective of Tw, by increasing it before entering water, then either exiting at a given Tb, or at an earlier time determined by other environmental conditions.  相似文献   

3.
At 14° C, standard metabolic rate (75·1 mg O2 h−1 kg−1), routine metabolic rate (108.8 mg O2 h−1 kg−1), active metabolic rate ( c . 380 mg O2 h−1 kg−1), critical swimming speed (Ucrit 1·7 BL s−1), heart rate 47 min−1), dorsal aortic pressure (3·2 kPa) and ventilation frequency (63 min−1) for triploid brown trout Salmo trutta were within the ranges reported for diploid brown trout and other salmonids at the same temperature. During prolonged swimming ( c . 80% U crit), cardiac output increased by 2·3-fold due to increases in heart rate (1·8-fold) and stroke volume (1·2-fold). At 18° C, although standard and routine metabolic rates, as well as resting heart rate and ventilation frequency increased significantly, active metabolic rate and certain cardiorespiratory variables during exercise did not differ from those values for fish acclimated to 14° C. As a result, factorial metabolic scope was reduced (2·93-fold at 18° C v . 5·13-fold at 14° C). Therefore, it is concluded that cardiorespiratory performance in triploid brown trout was not unusual at 18° C, but that reduced factorial metabolic scope may be a contributing factor to the mortality observed in triploid brown trout at temperatures near 18° C.  相似文献   

4.
Endurance and swimming speed were measured in mackerel, herring and saithe when they were induced by the optomotor response to swim at prolonged speeds along a 28-m circular track through still water in a 10-m diameter gantry tank. The maximum sustained swimming speed ( U ms was measured as body lengths per second ( b.l.s −1) for each species and for saithe of different size groups. Herring with U ms of 4.06 b.l.s −1 (25.3 cm, 13.5°C) were the fastest, mackerel U ms was 3.5 b.l.s 1 (33 cm, 11.7°C) and saithe (14.4°C) showed a size effect where U ms at 25 cm was 3.5 b.l.s 1 and at 50 cm 2.2 b.l.s 1. When swimming at speeds higher that U ms, all three species showed reduced endurance as speed increased. How the curved track reduces the swimming speed is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Hatchery cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarki clarki were used to examine the effects of 48 h and 3 week temperature acclimation periods on critical swimming speed ( U crit). The U crit was determined for fish at acclimation temperatures of 7, 14 and 18° C using two consecutive ramp‐ U crit tests in mobile Brett‐type swim tunnels. An additional group was tested at the stock's ambient rearing temperature of 10° C. The length of the temperature acclimation period had no significant effect on either the first or the second U crit( U crit‐1 and U crit‐2, respectively) or on the recovery ratio (the quotient of U crit‐2  U crit‐1−1). As anticipated, there was a significant positive relationship between U crit‐1 and temperature ( P  < 0·01) for both acclimation periods, and an increasing, though non‐significant, trend between U crit‐2 and temperature ( P  = 0·10). Acclimation temperature had no significant effect ( P  = 0·71) on the recovery ratio. These results indicate that a 48 h acclimation to experimental temperatures within the range of −3 to +8° C of the acclimation temperature may be sufficient in studies of swimming performance with this species. This ability to acclimate rapidly is probably adaptive for cutthroat trout and other species that occupy thermally variable environments.  相似文献   

6.
Critical swimming speed ( U crit) and rate of oxygen consumption of Pacific cod Gadus macrocephalus acclimated to 4 and 11° C were determined to assess the influence of water temperature on performance. The physiological effect of exercise trials on fish held at two temperatures was also assessed by comparing haematocrit and plasma concentrations of cortisol, metabolites and ions collected from fish before and after testing. The U crit of fish acclimated and exercised at 4° C did not differ from those acclimated and exercised at 11° C [1·07 body lengths (total length) s−1]. While the standard metabolic rate of 11° C acclimated fish was 28% higher than that of 4° C fish, no significant difference was observed between fish acclimated at the two temperatures. Plasma concentrations of cortisol, glucose and lactate increased significantly from pre- to post-swim in both groups, yet only concentrations of cortisol differed significantly between temperature treatments. Higher concentrations of cortisol in association with greater osmoregulatory disturbance in animals acclimated at the lower temperature indicate that the lower water temperature acted as an environmental stressor. Lack of significant differences in U crit between temperature treatments, however, suggests that Pacific cod have robust physiological resilience with respect to swimming performance within temperature changes from 4 to 11° C.  相似文献   

7.
G. Huang    L. Wei    X. Zhang  † T. Gao   《Journal of fish biology》2008,72(10):2534-2542
The compensatory growth of juvenile brown flounder Paralichthys olivaceus (body mass c. 12 g) following different thermal exposure was investigated. Fish were exposed to one of the five temperatures: 8·5 ( T 8·5), 13·0 ( T 13·0), 17·5 ( T 17·5), 22·0 ( T 22·0) and 26·5° C ( T 26·5) for 10 days and fish grew best at 22·0° C. Then the water temperature in all treatments was equably adjusted to 22·0° C over 3 days. At the end of the following 30 days after temperature adjustment, there were no significant differences between body masses of fish in the different treatments (wet body mass at the end of the experiment ranged from 22·13 to 24·56 g). Results indicated that the juvenile P. olivaceus achieved complete compensatory growth. Analysis of the dynamics of the feeding rates and feed conversion efficiencies indicated that compensatory growth of the fish experienced low temperature ( T 8·5, T 13·5 and T 17·5) or high temperature ( T 26·5) exposure was mainly dependent on increasing feed intake (hyperphagia) and possibly by improvement in feed conversion efficiency. The moisture content was not affected by different temperature exposure significantly. The lipid and energy content of juvenile P. olivaceus in T 8·5, however, were significantly lower than other treatment. Results of the current study indicate that a short period of low or high temperature exposure may not affect annual growth, but may affect lipid and energy deposition.  相似文献   

8.
Despite many studies demonstrating the effect of acclimation on behavioural or physiological traits, considerable debate still exists about the evolutionary significance of this phenomenon. One of the unresolved issues is whether acclimation to warmer temperature is beneficial at treatment or at more extreme test temperatures. To answer this question, we assessed the effect of thermal acclimation on preferred body temperatures ( T ps), maximum swimming and running speed, and critical thermal maximum ( CT max) in the Danube crested newt ( Triturus dobrogicus ). Adult newts were kept at 15 °C (control) and 25 °C (treatment) for 8 weeks prior to measurements. We measured T ps in an aquatic thermal gradient over 24 h, maximum speeds in a linear racetrack at six temperatures (5–33 °C), and CT max in a continuously heated water bath. T ps were higher in newts kept at 15 °C than in those kept at 25 °C. The maximum swimming speed did not acclimate. The maximum running speed at 30–33 °C was substantially higher in newts kept at 25 °C than in those kept at 15 °C. CT max increased with the treatment temperature. Hence, we conclude that the acclimation response to warm temperature is beneficial not at treatment but at more extreme temperatures in newts.  © 2007 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society , 2007, 90 , 627–636.  相似文献   

9.
ABSTRACT. In an ambient temperature ( T a) range of 18–28°C, thoracic temperatures ( T th) of individual male Lymantria dispar (L.), caught at flight in the field, ranged from 21 to 36.5°C, with a correlation coefficient of 0.63 between T th and ambient temperature ( T a). Ambient temperature (and insolation) altered the insect's body temperature and the probabilities, latencies, and durations of preflight responses to pheromone. In a wind tunnel at 16 and 20°C, quiescent males exposed to pheromone raised their T th by sustained wing fanning from 17 and 21°C, respectively, to c. 24°C before takeoff. At 24 and 28°C ambient, T th rose by takeoff to 28 and 31°C, respectively. The latencies of male wing fanning in response to pheromone decreased from 1.44 min at 16°C ambient, to 0.58 min at 20°C, to 0.26 min at 24°C, and to 0.16min at 28°C. The components of behaviour (antennal twitch, body jerk, step and wing tremor) that occurred between quiescence and wing fanning were more frequent at ambients of 16 and 20°C than at 24 and 28°C.  相似文献   

10.
We investigated the thermal acclimation of photosynthesis and respiration in black spruce seedlings [ Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.] grown at 22/14 °C [low temperature (LT)] or 30/22 °C [high temperature (HT)] day/night temperatures. Net CO2 assimilation rates ( A net) were greater in LT than in HT seedlings below 30 °C, but were greater in HT seedlings above 30 °C. Dark and day respiration rates were similar between treatments at the respective growth temperatures. When respiration was factored out of the photosynthesis response to temperature, the resulting gross CO2 assimilation rates ( A gross) was lower in HT than in LT seedlings below 30 °C, but was similar above 30 °C. The reduced A gross of HT seedlings was associated with lower needle nitrogen content, lower ribulose 1·5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) maximum carboxylation rates ( V cmax) and lower maximum electron transport rates ( J max). Growth treatment did not affect V cmax :  J max. Modelling of the CO2 response of photosynthesis indicated that LT seedlings at 40 °C might have been limited by heat lability of Rubisco activase, but that in HT seedlings, Rubisco capacity was limiting. In sum, thermal acclimation of A net was largely caused by reduced respiration and lower nitrogen investments in needles from HT seedlings. At 40 °C, photosynthesis in LT seedlings might be limited by Rubisco activase capacity, while in HT seedlings, acclimation removed this limitation.  相似文献   

11.
Pinfish Lagodon rhomboides acclimation rates were determined by modelling changes in critical thermal minimum ( T crit min, ° C) estimates at set intervals following a temperature decrease of 3–4° C. The results showed that pinfish gained a total of 3·7° C of cold tolerance over a range of acclimation temperatures ( T acc, ° C) from (23–12° C), that cold tolerance increased with exposure time to the reduced temperature at all T acc, but that the rate of cold tolerance accruement (mean 0·14° C day−1) was independent of T acc. A highly significant ( P < 0·001) multivariate predictive model was generated that described the acclimation rates and thermal tolerance of pinfish exposed to reduction in water temperature: log10 T crit min= 0·41597 − 0·01704 T acc+ 0·04320 T plunge− 0·08376[log10 ( t + 1)], where T plunge is plunge temperature (° C) and t is the time (days). A comparison of the present data, with acclimation rate data for other species, suggests that factors such as latitude or geographic range may play a more important role than ambient temperature in determining cold acclimation rates in fishes.  相似文献   

12.
Underyearling Lake Inari Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus were acclimated to 11·0) C for 3 weeks, and then one group was maintained at 11·0) C and others were exposed to 14·4) Cconst, 17·7) Cconst or a diel fluctuating temperature of 14·3° C ± 1° C (14·3° Cfluc). Routine rates of oxygen consumption and ammonia excretion were measured over 10 days before the temperature change and over 31 days following the change. Measurements were made on fish that were feeding and growing. The temperature increase produced an immediate increase in oxygen consumption. There was then a decline over the next few days, suggesting that thermal acclimation was rapid. For groups exposed to constant temperature there was an increase in oxygen consumption ( M accl, mg kg−1 h−1) with increasing temperature ( T ), the relationship being approximated by an exponential model: M accl= 46·53e0·086 T . At 14·3° Cfluc oxygen consumption declined during the 3–4 days following the temperature shift, but remained higher than at 14·4° Cconst. This indicates that small temperature fluctuations have some additional influences that increase metabolic rate. Ammonia excretion rates showed diel variations. Excretion was lower at 11° Cconst than at other temperatures, and increases in temperature had a significant effect on ammonia excretion rate. Fluctuating (14·3° Cfluc) temperature did not influence ammonia excretion relative to constant temperature (14·4° Cconst).  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
A flow-through respirometer and swim tunnel was used to estimate the gait transition speed ( U p-c) of striped surfperch Embiotoca lateralis , a labriform swimmer, and to investigate metabolic costs associated with gait transition. The U p-c was defined as the lowest speed at which fish decrease the use of pectoral fins significantly. While the tail was first recruited for manoeuvring at relatively low swimming speeds, the use of the tail at these low speeds [as low as 0·75 body (fork) lengths s−1, L F s−1) was rare (<10% of the total time). Tail movements at these low speeds appeared to be associated with occasional slow manoeuvres rather than providing power. As speed was increased beyond U p-c, pectoral fin (PF) frequencies kept increasing when the tail was not used, while they did not when PF locomotion was aided by the tail. At these high speeds, the tail was employed for 40–50% of the time, either in addition to pectoral fins or during burst-and-coast mode. Oxygen consumption increased exponentially with swimming speeds up to gait transition, and then levelled off. Similarly, cost of transport ( C T) decreased with increasing speed, and then levelled off near U p-c. When speeds ≥ U p-c are considered, C T is higher than the theoretical curve extrapolated for PF swimming, suggesting that PF swimming appears to be higher energetically less costly than undulatory swimming using the tail.  相似文献   

15.
The temperature differential (Δ T ) between a body surface and the environment influences an organism's heat balance. In Sarasota Bay, FL, where ambient water temperature ( T w) ranges annually from 11° to 33°C, Δ T was investigated in a resident community of bottlenose dolphins ( Tursiops truncatus ). Dorsal fin surface temperatures ( T dfin) were measured on wild, free-swimming dolphins using infrared thermography. Field and laboratory calibration studies were also undertaken to assess the efficacy of this non-invasive technology in the marine environment. The portability of infrared thermography permitted measurements of T dfin across the entire range of environmental temperatures experienced by animals in this region. Results indicated a positive, linear relationship between T dfin and T w ( r 2= 0.978, P < 0.001). On average, T dfin was 0.9°C warmer than T w across seasons, despite the 22°C annual range in T w. Changes in integumentary and vascular insulation likely account for the stability of Δ T dfin − w and the protection of core temperature ( T core) across seasons. The high thermal conductivity of water may also influence this Δ T . The use of infrared thermography is an effective, non-invasive method of assessing dorsal fin skin surface temperatures (±1°C) across large numbers of wild, free-swimming dolphins throughout their thermally dynamic aquatic environment.  相似文献   

16.
Oxygen consumption (o2) and respiratory variables were measured in the Prochilodontid fish, Prochilodus scrofa exposed to graded hypoxia after changes in temperature. The measurements were performed on fish acclimated to 25°C and in four further groups also acclimated to 25°C and then changed to 15, 20, 30 and 35°C. An increase in o2 occurred with rising temperature, but at each temperature o2 was kept constant over a wide range of O2 tensions of inspired water ( Pi o2). The critical oxygen tensions ( Pc o2) were Pi o2= 22 mmHg for 25°C acclimated specimens and after transfer from 25°C to 15, 20, 30 and 35°C the Pc o2 changed to Pi o2= 28, 22, 24 and 45 mmHg, respectively. Gill ventilation ( G ) increased or decreased following the changes in o2 as the temperature changed and was the result of an accentuated increase in breath frequency. During hypoxia the increases in G were characterized by larger increases in breath volume. Oxygen extraction was kept almost constant at about 63% regardless of temperature and ambient oxygen tensions in normoxia and moderate hypoxia ( P o2∼70 mmHg). P. scrofa showed high tolerance to hypoxia after abrupt changes in temperature although its survival upon transfer to 35°C could become limited by the capacity of ventilatory mechanisms to alleviate hypoxic stress.  相似文献   

17.
Smallmouth bass larvae became highly sensitive to oxygen deficiency on the second day after hatching and continued so to the 10th day. During this period they could not survive exposure to 1 mg O2 l–1 for 3 h at 20° C, and many were killed within 1 h. At 2 mg O2 l–1 half the larvae survived 3 h at 20° C; at 2.5 mg l–1 most survived, and at 3.5 mg l–1 all survived. Resistance to oxygen deficiency was regained by the 11th day, the majority of the larvae withstanding a 3-h exposure at 1 mg O2 l–1. At 25° C the effects of low oxygen concentration were intensified. At 3 and 4 mg O2 l–1 and 20° C the normally quiescent larvae became very active, even swimming to the surface 5 or 6 cm above the substrate. Increasing the temperature increased this response. Smallmouth larvae were more sensitive than large-mouth bass larvae to oxygen deficiency.  相似文献   

18.
Embryos and yolk‐feeding larvae of lake minnow Eupallasella percnurus were reared at 13, 16, 19, 22 and 25° C with no access to external food. Time from egg activation to first embryonic movements, hatching, filling of swimbladder and final yolk resorption increased with decreasing temperature. At 13° C, c . 40% of larvae were unable to fill their swimbladder. The predicted lower temperature at which development and growth ceased (biological zero, t 0) was the same for both processes, c . 7·5–10·5° C. There was no ontogenetic shift in the t 0 value. Temperature coefficients for development ( Q 10dev.) ranged from 2 to 3 at 19–25° C, but were higher in hatched larvae at lower temperatures. Eggs of E. percnurus had a combination of small size, high hydration and low caloric value of fresh matter. Dry mass of larval tissue on yolk, percentage of dry matter in wet matter, and specific growth rate were maximized at 22 and 25° C. At 19–25° C, energy and matter contained in the initial eggs were converted to body tissue most efficiently. Temperatures from 22 to 25° C are considered optimal for E. percnurus embryos and yolk‐feeding larvae and are recommended for their indoor rearing.  相似文献   

19.
Spontaneous locomotor activity of cod Gadus morhua maintained at 6° C tripled from February to May. In contrast, locomotor activity of cod held at 2° C was significantly lower than at 6° C (between 25 and 65% lower) and the seasonal increase was smaller. Plasma levels of both thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) did not differ between 2 and 6° C. T4 injection increased locomotor activity by 10% for both temperature regimes. These data indicate that low water temperature reduces locomotor activity associated with migration in cod and that thyroid hormones are not involved in this decrease. This study provides a possible mechanism through which cold waters may affects migration and distribution of cod via its Effects on locomotor activity and swimming speed.  相似文献   

20.
Changes in the temperature dependence of the photosynthetic rate depending on growth temperature were investigated for a temperate evergreen tree, Quercus myrsinaefolia . Plants were grown at 250 μ mol quanta m–2 s–1 under two temperature conditions, 15 and 30 °C. The optimal temperature that maximizes the light-saturated rate of photosynthesis at 350 μ L L–1 CO2 was found to be 20–25 and 30–35 °C for leaves grown at 15 and 30 °C, respectively. We focused on two processes, carboxylation and regeneration of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP), which potentially limit photosynthetic rates. Because the former process is known to limit photosynthesis at lower CO2 concentrations while the latter limits it at higher CO2 concentrations, we determined the temperature dependence of the photosynthetic rate at 200 and 1000 μ L L–1 CO2 under saturated light. It was revealed that the temperature dependence of both processes varied depending on the growth temperature. Using a biochemical model, we estimated the capacity of the two processes at various temperatures under ambient CO2 concentration. It was suggested that, in leaves grown at low temperature (15 °C), the photosynthetic rate was limited solely by RuBP carboxylation under any temperature. On the other hand, it was suggested that, in leaves grown at high temperature (30 °C), the photosynthetic rate was limited by RuBP regeneration below 22 °C, but limited by RuBP carboxylation above 22 °C. We concluded that: (1) the changes in the temperature dependence of carboxylation and regeneration of RuBP and (2) the changes in the balance of these two processes altered the temperature dependence of the photosynthetic rate.  相似文献   

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