Thermal impairment of reproduction is differentially expressed in maiden and repeat spawning Atlantic salmon

Groups of maiden or repeat spawning Atlantic salmon were maintained during vitellogenesis in austral autumn at either 14 àor 22 àthrough until April when all fish were transferred to a spawning temperature of 8 î There was no difference in body weight within groups for maidens and repeats, with repe...

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Published in:Aquaculture
Main Authors: Pankhurst, Ned, King, H., Anderson, K., Elizur, A., Pankhurst, Patricia, Ruff, N.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10072/40731
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2011.03.009
id ftgriffithuniv:oai:research-repository.griffith.edu.au:10072/40731
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spelling ftgriffithuniv:oai:research-repository.griffith.edu.au:10072/40731 2023-05-15T15:31:43+02:00 Thermal impairment of reproduction is differentially expressed in maiden and repeat spawning Atlantic salmon Pankhurst, Ned King, H. Anderson, K. Elizur, A. Pankhurst, Patricia Ruff, N. 2011 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10072/40731 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2011.03.009 English en_US eng Elsevier Aquaculture © 2011 Elsevier Inc. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version. Fisheries Sciences not elsewhere classified Journal article 2011 ftgriffithuniv https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2011.03.009 2018-07-30T10:46:22Z Groups of maiden or repeat spawning Atlantic salmon were maintained during vitellogenesis in austral autumn at either 14 àor 22 àthrough until April when all fish were transferred to a spawning temperature of 8 î There was no difference in body weight within groups for maidens and repeats, with repeats being consistently larger than maidens, no difference in condition factor amongst groups, but consistently higher gonad weight in repeats than maidens. Gonadosomatic index (GSI) and follicle diameter were suppressed in both maidens and repeats at 22 ì with the effect being most marked in repeat spawners. Relative fecundity (egg kg-1) determined from ovarian tissue samples also showed depression in repeats at 22 î Fish from both age classes held at 22 àhad a higher proportion of atretic follicles. Plasma levels of estradiol-17ߠ(E2) were strongly depressed in both maidens and repeats exposed to 22 àthroughout autumn but there was some evidence of recovery amongst maiden fish by late April. A similar effect was seen on plasma testosterone (T) levels. Plasma cortisol levels were generally low and typical of levels in unstressed fish indicating that stress did not account for the inhibitory effects observed. Hepatic zona pellucida protein gene expression was significantly inhibited in both maiden and repeat spawning fish reared at 22 ì but with some evidence of recovery after temperature reduction to 8 î Hepatic vitellogenin (Vtg) gene expression was also lower in both maiden and repeat spawning fish exposed to 22 àand this was accompanied by reduced plasma Vtg levels in maidens, but not repeats at 22 î Maidens at 14 àbegan ovulating first followed by repeats at 14 ì then repeats at 22 àfollowed by maidens at 22 î There was reduced fertility in maidens at 22 àrelative to both maidens and repeats at 14 ì whereas repeats at 22 àshowed intermediate fertility between 14 àfish and 22 àmaidens. Survival to the eyed egg stage was highest in maidens at 14 ì significantly suppressed at 22 àin maidens, and at intermediate levels in repeats at both temperatures. This suggests that repeat spawning Atlantic salmon may be more robust in the face of thermal insult which combined with their larger size and egg production, could make their use desirable under production situations where there was any threat of exposure to higher than normal temperature. Griffith Sciences, Griffith School of Environment Full Text Article in Journal/Newspaper Atlantic salmon Griffith University: Griffith Research Online Austral Griffith ENVELOPE(-155.500,-155.500,-85.883,-85.883) Aquaculture 316 1-4 77 87
institution Open Polar
collection Griffith University: Griffith Research Online
op_collection_id ftgriffithuniv
language English
topic Fisheries Sciences not elsewhere classified
spellingShingle Fisheries Sciences not elsewhere classified
Pankhurst, Ned
King, H.
Anderson, K.
Elizur, A.
Pankhurst, Patricia
Ruff, N.
Thermal impairment of reproduction is differentially expressed in maiden and repeat spawning Atlantic salmon
topic_facet Fisheries Sciences not elsewhere classified
description Groups of maiden or repeat spawning Atlantic salmon were maintained during vitellogenesis in austral autumn at either 14 àor 22 àthrough until April when all fish were transferred to a spawning temperature of 8 î There was no difference in body weight within groups for maidens and repeats, with repeats being consistently larger than maidens, no difference in condition factor amongst groups, but consistently higher gonad weight in repeats than maidens. Gonadosomatic index (GSI) and follicle diameter were suppressed in both maidens and repeats at 22 ì with the effect being most marked in repeat spawners. Relative fecundity (egg kg-1) determined from ovarian tissue samples also showed depression in repeats at 22 î Fish from both age classes held at 22 àhad a higher proportion of atretic follicles. Plasma levels of estradiol-17ߠ(E2) were strongly depressed in both maidens and repeats exposed to 22 àthroughout autumn but there was some evidence of recovery amongst maiden fish by late April. A similar effect was seen on plasma testosterone (T) levels. Plasma cortisol levels were generally low and typical of levels in unstressed fish indicating that stress did not account for the inhibitory effects observed. Hepatic zona pellucida protein gene expression was significantly inhibited in both maiden and repeat spawning fish reared at 22 ì but with some evidence of recovery after temperature reduction to 8 î Hepatic vitellogenin (Vtg) gene expression was also lower in both maiden and repeat spawning fish exposed to 22 àand this was accompanied by reduced plasma Vtg levels in maidens, but not repeats at 22 î Maidens at 14 àbegan ovulating first followed by repeats at 14 ì then repeats at 22 àfollowed by maidens at 22 î There was reduced fertility in maidens at 22 àrelative to both maidens and repeats at 14 ì whereas repeats at 22 àshowed intermediate fertility between 14 àfish and 22 àmaidens. Survival to the eyed egg stage was highest in maidens at 14 ì significantly suppressed at 22 àin maidens, and at intermediate levels in repeats at both temperatures. This suggests that repeat spawning Atlantic salmon may be more robust in the face of thermal insult which combined with their larger size and egg production, could make their use desirable under production situations where there was any threat of exposure to higher than normal temperature. Griffith Sciences, Griffith School of Environment Full Text
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Pankhurst, Ned
King, H.
Anderson, K.
Elizur, A.
Pankhurst, Patricia
Ruff, N.
author_facet Pankhurst, Ned
King, H.
Anderson, K.
Elizur, A.
Pankhurst, Patricia
Ruff, N.
author_sort Pankhurst, Ned
title Thermal impairment of reproduction is differentially expressed in maiden and repeat spawning Atlantic salmon
title_short Thermal impairment of reproduction is differentially expressed in maiden and repeat spawning Atlantic salmon
title_full Thermal impairment of reproduction is differentially expressed in maiden and repeat spawning Atlantic salmon
title_fullStr Thermal impairment of reproduction is differentially expressed in maiden and repeat spawning Atlantic salmon
title_full_unstemmed Thermal impairment of reproduction is differentially expressed in maiden and repeat spawning Atlantic salmon
title_sort thermal impairment of reproduction is differentially expressed in maiden and repeat spawning atlantic salmon
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10072/40731
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2011.03.009
long_lat ENVELOPE(-155.500,-155.500,-85.883,-85.883)
geographic Austral
Griffith
geographic_facet Austral
Griffith
genre Atlantic salmon
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
op_relation Aquaculture
op_rights © 2011 Elsevier Inc. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2011.03.009
container_title Aquaculture
container_volume 316
container_issue 1-4
container_start_page 77
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