PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF THE ATLANTIC COD (GADUS MORHUA) TO HYPOXIA AT VARIOUS ENVIRONMENTAL SALINITIES

Atlantic cod ( Gadus morhua L.) acclimated to water salinities ranging from 28 to 7 were exposed to mild (8.0 kPa) or severe (4.0 kPa) hypoxic conditions for 6h. In each experiment, respiratory, acid-base, ionic, haematological and metabolic disturbances were analyzed. During mild hypoxia, a strong...

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Main Authors: CLAIREAUX, GUY, DUTIL, JEAN-DENIS
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Company of Biologists 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/163/1/97
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spelling fthighwire:oai:open-archive.highwire.org:jexbio:163/1/97 2023-05-15T15:27:03+02:00 PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF THE ATLANTIC COD (GADUS MORHUA) TO HYPOXIA AT VARIOUS ENVIRONMENTAL SALINITIES CLAIREAUX, GUY DUTIL, JEAN-DENIS 1992-02-01 00:00:00.0 text/html http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/163/1/97 en eng Company of Biologists http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/163/1/97 Copyright (C) 1992, Company of Biologists Journal Articles TEXT 1992 fthighwire 2013-05-27T05:07:34Z Atlantic cod ( Gadus morhua L.) acclimated to water salinities ranging from 28 to 7 were exposed to mild (8.0 kPa) or severe (4.0 kPa) hypoxic conditions for 6h. In each experiment, respiratory, acid-base, ionic, haematological and metabolic disturbances were analyzed. During mild hypoxia, a strong hyperventilatory response was observed, resulting in a respiratory alkalosis that persisted throughout the 6-h trial. Plasma Cl- and pyruvate levels were the only other variables to display significant changes: they both increased. In more severe hypoxic conditions, although the ventilatory response was the same, a weak metabolic acidosis was superimposed. The haematological response (increased haematocrit and decreased mean cellular haemoglobin content) suggested that catecholamines were released into the blood. Both Na+ and Cl- concentrations increased significantly. Metabolic perturbations occurred: plasma lactate, pyruvate and glucose concentrations increased markedly. Though lactate concentrations in liver, heart and white muscle increased, the concentrations of pyruvate, glucose and glycogen did not change significantly. Water salinity affected the amplitude of the ionic responses during hypoxia: the amplitude decreased with decreasing salinity. Irrespective of water salinity, 23 of 29 fish survived the severe hypoxic conditions. This relatively good tolerance of low water oxygenation, as compared with other marine bottom-feeders, suggests that this species may face poorly oxygenated waters in the wild. Together with temperature and salinity, ater oxygen content may thus be an important variable to take into account in the study of the distribution and migration patterns of Atlantic cod. Text atlantic cod Gadus morhua HighWire Press (Stanford University)
institution Open Polar
collection HighWire Press (Stanford University)
op_collection_id fthighwire
language English
topic Journal Articles
spellingShingle Journal Articles
CLAIREAUX, GUY
DUTIL, JEAN-DENIS
PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF THE ATLANTIC COD (GADUS MORHUA) TO HYPOXIA AT VARIOUS ENVIRONMENTAL SALINITIES
topic_facet Journal Articles
description Atlantic cod ( Gadus morhua L.) acclimated to water salinities ranging from 28 to 7 were exposed to mild (8.0 kPa) or severe (4.0 kPa) hypoxic conditions for 6h. In each experiment, respiratory, acid-base, ionic, haematological and metabolic disturbances were analyzed. During mild hypoxia, a strong hyperventilatory response was observed, resulting in a respiratory alkalosis that persisted throughout the 6-h trial. Plasma Cl- and pyruvate levels were the only other variables to display significant changes: they both increased. In more severe hypoxic conditions, although the ventilatory response was the same, a weak metabolic acidosis was superimposed. The haematological response (increased haematocrit and decreased mean cellular haemoglobin content) suggested that catecholamines were released into the blood. Both Na+ and Cl- concentrations increased significantly. Metabolic perturbations occurred: plasma lactate, pyruvate and glucose concentrations increased markedly. Though lactate concentrations in liver, heart and white muscle increased, the concentrations of pyruvate, glucose and glycogen did not change significantly. Water salinity affected the amplitude of the ionic responses during hypoxia: the amplitude decreased with decreasing salinity. Irrespective of water salinity, 23 of 29 fish survived the severe hypoxic conditions. This relatively good tolerance of low water oxygenation, as compared with other marine bottom-feeders, suggests that this species may face poorly oxygenated waters in the wild. Together with temperature and salinity, ater oxygen content may thus be an important variable to take into account in the study of the distribution and migration patterns of Atlantic cod.
format Text
author CLAIREAUX, GUY
DUTIL, JEAN-DENIS
author_facet CLAIREAUX, GUY
DUTIL, JEAN-DENIS
author_sort CLAIREAUX, GUY
title PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF THE ATLANTIC COD (GADUS MORHUA) TO HYPOXIA AT VARIOUS ENVIRONMENTAL SALINITIES
title_short PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF THE ATLANTIC COD (GADUS MORHUA) TO HYPOXIA AT VARIOUS ENVIRONMENTAL SALINITIES
title_full PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF THE ATLANTIC COD (GADUS MORHUA) TO HYPOXIA AT VARIOUS ENVIRONMENTAL SALINITIES
title_fullStr PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF THE ATLANTIC COD (GADUS MORHUA) TO HYPOXIA AT VARIOUS ENVIRONMENTAL SALINITIES
title_full_unstemmed PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF THE ATLANTIC COD (GADUS MORHUA) TO HYPOXIA AT VARIOUS ENVIRONMENTAL SALINITIES
title_sort physiological response of the atlantic cod (gadus morhua) to hypoxia at various environmental salinities
publisher Company of Biologists
publishDate 1992
url http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/163/1/97
genre atlantic cod
Gadus morhua
genre_facet atlantic cod
Gadus morhua
op_relation http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/163/1/97
op_rights Copyright (C) 1992, Company of Biologists
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