Muscle growth of triploid Atlantic cod juveniles (Gadus morhua)

Accepted manuscript version. Published version at http://doi.org/10.1111/are.12879 . This study has investigated the muscle growth of diploid and triploid Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) juveniles raised in replicate tanks over a period of 29 weeks and analysed at three sampling points (February, June a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Aquaculture Research
Main Authors: Vargas, Cecilia Campos, Peruzzi, Stefano, Palihawadana, Anjana, Ottesen, Oddvar, Hagen, Ørjan
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2015
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10037/8960
https://doi.org/10.1111/are.12879
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Summary:Accepted manuscript version. Published version at http://doi.org/10.1111/are.12879 . This study has investigated the muscle growth of diploid and triploid Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) juveniles raised in replicate tanks over a period of 29 weeks and analysed at three sampling points (February, June and September). Data for weight, length, condition factor (K), muscle fibre growth and myogenic progenitor cells (MPCs) number were collected and results were analysed in relation to body growth and ploidy status. Diploids were significantly heavier than triploids throughout the trial (~10–20%) and had K in June and September samplings. Over the whole period, the rate of muscle fibres’ recruitment was 318 fibres per day and 252 fibres per day for diploid and triploid cod respectively. The larger body weight of diploids resulted in a total num- ber of fast fibre number of 114 979 compared to 91 086 in triploids. The average diameter of the 2.5% of the smallest fibres (2.5th percentile) was higher in diploids than triploids at the start of the trial, with a reversed picture for the aver- age of the upper 2.5% (97.5th percentile) at the end of the trial. The probability density function of the estimated muscle fibre diameters showed similar fibre size distribution between size- matched diploids and triploids at all sample points. The peak fibre diameter was approxi- mately 25 lm in February and increased to approximately 50 lm in June and September, irrespectively of ploidy. Pax 7 were used as molecular markers for MPCs. A positive correla- tion between Pax 7+ cells and total body length was observed only among triploid fish at the onset of the experiment.