The effects of constant and cyclical hypoxia on the survival, growth and metabolic physiology of incubating Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)

Salmonids reared in aquaculture incubation systems are susceptible to periods of cyclical or fluctuating hypoxia caused by embryo crowding, water flow rates and management protocols. Hypoxia during early development can reduce salmon growth, development and survival, and delay hatching, potentially...

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Main Authors: AT Wood, Timothy Clark, NG Elliott, PB Frappell, SJ Andrewartha
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30137629
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/The_effects_of_constant_and_cyclical_hypoxia_on_the_survival_growth_and_metabolic_physiology_of_incubating_Atlantic_salmon_Salmo_salar_/20704342
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spelling ftdeakinunifig:oai:figshare.com:article/20704342 2024-06-23T07:51:16+00:00 The effects of constant and cyclical hypoxia on the survival, growth and metabolic physiology of incubating Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) AT Wood Timothy Clark NG Elliott PB Frappell SJ Andrewartha 2020-10-15T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30137629 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/The_effects_of_constant_and_cyclical_hypoxia_on_the_survival_growth_and_metabolic_physiology_of_incubating_Atlantic_salmon_Salmo_salar_/20704342 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30137629 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/The_effects_of_constant_and_cyclical_hypoxia_on_the_survival_growth_and_metabolic_physiology_of_incubating_Atlantic_salmon_Salmo_salar_/20704342 All Rights Reserved Fisheries sciences not elsewhere classified Zoology not elsewhere classified Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Fisheries Marine & Freshwater Biology ONCORHYNCHUS-MYKISS EMBRYOS CHAR SALVELINUS-ALPINUS DISSOLVED-OXYGEN RESPIRATORY DEVELOPMENT BOUNDARY-LAYER YOLK-SAC AVAILABILITY PERFORMANCE EXPOSURE REGIME Atlantic salmon Cyclical hypoxia Early development Metabolic rate Hatching School of Life and Environmental Sciences 3005 Fisheries sciences Text Journal contribution 2020 ftdeakinunifig 2024-06-06T01:22:10Z Salmonids reared in aquaculture incubation systems are susceptible to periods of cyclical or fluctuating hypoxia caused by embryo crowding, water flow rates and management protocols. Hypoxia during early development can reduce salmon growth, development and survival, and delay hatching, potentially impacting future performance and survival in subsequent phases of life. However, salmon embryos can also limit the effects of hypoxia by metabolic depression, premature hatching or physiological modifications to improve oxygen delivery. Here, we investigated the effects of constant and cyclical hypoxia on the growth, development, hatching, survival, oxygen uptake rate (ṀO2) and hypoxia tolerance (O2crit) of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) from fertilisation, through hatching, until 113 days post-fertilisation (DPF). We incubated salmon in either normoxia (100% dissolved oxygen [DO; as percent air saturation]), moderate hypoxia (~63% DO), severe hypoxia (~27% DO) or cyclical hypoxia (~100–25% DO daily). At the eyed-egg stage routine oxygen uptake (ṀO2rout) was reduced by ~20% in salmon from the cyclical and moderate hypoxia treatments, although reduced ṀO2rout was not associated with a reduction in O2crit. Moderate hypoxia did not affect growth, development, survival or hatching. However, at 113 DPF cyclical hypoxia-incubated salmon were ~12% smaller and developmentally delayed by ~5 days compared to normoxia-incubated salmon as a result of reduced growth and development prior to the eyed-egg stage (~39 DPF). Survival was unaffected by moderate or cyclical hypoxia, but hatching was delayed by ~2–3 days in cyclical hypoxia incubated salmon. Severe hypoxia produced deformed embryos, greatly decreased growth and development and resulted in 99.3% mortality by 113 DPF. This study demonstrates that Atlantic salmon have a considerable capacity to survive daily bouts of extreme hypoxia, however, the consequent reductions in growth, development and hatching may still have implications in aquaculture systems. Article in Journal/Newspaper Atlantic salmon Salmo salar Salvelinus alpinus DRO - Deakin Research Online
institution Open Polar
collection DRO - Deakin Research Online
op_collection_id ftdeakinunifig
language unknown
topic Fisheries sciences not elsewhere classified
Zoology not elsewhere classified
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Fisheries
Marine & Freshwater Biology
ONCORHYNCHUS-MYKISS EMBRYOS
CHAR SALVELINUS-ALPINUS
DISSOLVED-OXYGEN
RESPIRATORY DEVELOPMENT
BOUNDARY-LAYER
YOLK-SAC
AVAILABILITY
PERFORMANCE
EXPOSURE
REGIME
Atlantic salmon
Cyclical hypoxia
Early development
Metabolic rate
Hatching
School of Life and Environmental Sciences
3005 Fisheries sciences
spellingShingle Fisheries sciences not elsewhere classified
Zoology not elsewhere classified
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Fisheries
Marine & Freshwater Biology
ONCORHYNCHUS-MYKISS EMBRYOS
CHAR SALVELINUS-ALPINUS
DISSOLVED-OXYGEN
RESPIRATORY DEVELOPMENT
BOUNDARY-LAYER
YOLK-SAC
AVAILABILITY
PERFORMANCE
EXPOSURE
REGIME
Atlantic salmon
Cyclical hypoxia
Early development
Metabolic rate
Hatching
School of Life and Environmental Sciences
3005 Fisheries sciences
AT Wood
Timothy Clark
NG Elliott
PB Frappell
SJ Andrewartha
The effects of constant and cyclical hypoxia on the survival, growth and metabolic physiology of incubating Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
topic_facet Fisheries sciences not elsewhere classified
Zoology not elsewhere classified
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Fisheries
Marine & Freshwater Biology
ONCORHYNCHUS-MYKISS EMBRYOS
CHAR SALVELINUS-ALPINUS
DISSOLVED-OXYGEN
RESPIRATORY DEVELOPMENT
BOUNDARY-LAYER
YOLK-SAC
AVAILABILITY
PERFORMANCE
EXPOSURE
REGIME
Atlantic salmon
Cyclical hypoxia
Early development
Metabolic rate
Hatching
School of Life and Environmental Sciences
3005 Fisheries sciences
description Salmonids reared in aquaculture incubation systems are susceptible to periods of cyclical or fluctuating hypoxia caused by embryo crowding, water flow rates and management protocols. Hypoxia during early development can reduce salmon growth, development and survival, and delay hatching, potentially impacting future performance and survival in subsequent phases of life. However, salmon embryos can also limit the effects of hypoxia by metabolic depression, premature hatching or physiological modifications to improve oxygen delivery. Here, we investigated the effects of constant and cyclical hypoxia on the growth, development, hatching, survival, oxygen uptake rate (ṀO2) and hypoxia tolerance (O2crit) of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) from fertilisation, through hatching, until 113 days post-fertilisation (DPF). We incubated salmon in either normoxia (100% dissolved oxygen [DO; as percent air saturation]), moderate hypoxia (~63% DO), severe hypoxia (~27% DO) or cyclical hypoxia (~100–25% DO daily). At the eyed-egg stage routine oxygen uptake (ṀO2rout) was reduced by ~20% in salmon from the cyclical and moderate hypoxia treatments, although reduced ṀO2rout was not associated with a reduction in O2crit. Moderate hypoxia did not affect growth, development, survival or hatching. However, at 113 DPF cyclical hypoxia-incubated salmon were ~12% smaller and developmentally delayed by ~5 days compared to normoxia-incubated salmon as a result of reduced growth and development prior to the eyed-egg stage (~39 DPF). Survival was unaffected by moderate or cyclical hypoxia, but hatching was delayed by ~2–3 days in cyclical hypoxia incubated salmon. Severe hypoxia produced deformed embryos, greatly decreased growth and development and resulted in 99.3% mortality by 113 DPF. This study demonstrates that Atlantic salmon have a considerable capacity to survive daily bouts of extreme hypoxia, however, the consequent reductions in growth, development and hatching may still have implications in aquaculture systems.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author AT Wood
Timothy Clark
NG Elliott
PB Frappell
SJ Andrewartha
author_facet AT Wood
Timothy Clark
NG Elliott
PB Frappell
SJ Andrewartha
author_sort AT Wood
title The effects of constant and cyclical hypoxia on the survival, growth and metabolic physiology of incubating Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
title_short The effects of constant and cyclical hypoxia on the survival, growth and metabolic physiology of incubating Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
title_full The effects of constant and cyclical hypoxia on the survival, growth and metabolic physiology of incubating Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
title_fullStr The effects of constant and cyclical hypoxia on the survival, growth and metabolic physiology of incubating Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
title_full_unstemmed The effects of constant and cyclical hypoxia on the survival, growth and metabolic physiology of incubating Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
title_sort effects of constant and cyclical hypoxia on the survival, growth and metabolic physiology of incubating atlantic salmon (salmo salar)
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30137629
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/The_effects_of_constant_and_cyclical_hypoxia_on_the_survival_growth_and_metabolic_physiology_of_incubating_Atlantic_salmon_Salmo_salar_/20704342
genre Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
Salvelinus alpinus
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
Salvelinus alpinus
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30137629
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/The_effects_of_constant_and_cyclical_hypoxia_on_the_survival_growth_and_metabolic_physiology_of_incubating_Atlantic_salmon_Salmo_salar_/20704342
op_rights All Rights Reserved
_version_ 1802642299587395584