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Physiological (antioxidant) responses of estuarine fishes to variability in dissolved oxygen
Authors:Steve W Ross  David A Dalton  S Kramer  BL Christensen
Institution:1. North Carolina National Estuarine Research Reserve, NC Division Coastal Management, 5600 Marvin Moss Ln., Wilmington, NC 28409, USA;2. Reed College, Biology Dept., 3203 SE Woodstock Blvd., Portland, OR 97202, USA;3. Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve, 1700 Elkhorn Rd., Watsonville, CA 95076, USA
Abstract:Cycles of dissolved oxygen (DO) in estuaries can range from anoxia to various levels of supersaturation (200–300%) over short time periods. Aerobic metabolism causes formation of damaging reactive oxygen species (ROS), a process exacerbated by high or low DO. Fish can generate physiological defenses (e.g. antioxidant enzymes) against ROS, however, there are little data tying this to environmental conditions. We investigated physiological defenses generated by estuarine fishes in response to high DO and various DO cycles. We hypothesized that chemical defenses and/or oxidative damage are related to patterns of DO supersaturation. Specific activities of antioxidants in fish tissues should be positively correlated with increasing levels of DO, if high DO levels are physiologically stressful. We caged common benthic fishes (longjaw mudsucker, Gillichthysmirabilis, and staghorn sculpin, Leptocottusarmatus, in CA and spot, Leiostomusxanthurus and pinfish, Lagodonrhomboides, in NC) during summer 1998 in two estuarine sites in southern North Carolina and two in central California. At each site a water quality meter measured bottom DO, salinity, temperature, depth, pH and turbidity at 30 min intervals throughout the study. These sites exhibited a wide variety of dissolved oxygen patterns. After 2 weeks in the cages, fish gills and livers were analyzed for antioxidant enzymes (glutathione peroxidase, catalase and superoxide dismutase) and the metabolite glutathione. All fish exhibited antioxidant enzyme activity. There was a significant site-dependent effect on all enzyme activities at the NC sites, with the most activity at the site with the highest DO cycling and the most DO supersaturation. There was a trend towards higher enzyme activities under high DO levels at the CA sites.
Keywords:Spot  Pinfish  Longjaw mudsucker  Staghorn sculpin  National Estuarine Research Reserves  North Carolina  California
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