Plasma cortisol and 17β-oestradiol levels in roach exposed to acute and chronic stress |
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Authors: | T. G. Pottinger,&Dagger ,W. E. Yeomans,&dagger T. R. Carrick |
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Affiliation: | NERC Institute of Freshwater Ecology, Windermere Laboratory, The Ferry House, Ambleside, Cumbria LA22 0LP, U.K.;Environment Agency, Biology Laboratory, Fobney Mead, Rose Kiln Lane, Reading RG2 0SF, U.K. |
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Abstract: | Plasma cortisol levels were measured as an indicator of physiological stress in roach subjected to brief handling, or to a 14-day period of confinement, and in undisturbed control fish, during winter (water temperature 5° C) and summer (16° C), at which time plasma 17 β-oestradiol levels were also determined. Cortisol levels in undisturbed roach were low (mean 8·1 ng ml−1 at 5° C; 1·4 ng ml−1 at 16° C) and both handling and handling+confinement elevated blood cortisol levels significantly to 400 and 140 ng ml−1, respectively (at 5° C) and 700 and 600 ng ml−1, respectively (at 16) C). Blood cortisol levels had almost returned to baseline within 4 h following handling alone but in fish subjected to handling and prolonged confinement cortisol levels remained elevated for up to 168 h. Differences in baseline and poststress levels of cortisol, and in the rate of recovery from acute stress, were observed at the two different temperatures and the possible factors underlying these differences are discussed. Circulating levels of 17 β-oestradiol were reduced significantly within 24 h of exposure to either acute handling or chronic confinement indicating that the reproductive endocrine system in roach is sensitive to disruption by stressors. |
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Keywords: | Roach Rutilus rutilus stress cortisol 17 β-oestradiol |
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