Behavioral and Reproductive Effects of Environmental Enrichment and Pseudoloma neurophilia infection on Adult Zebrafish (Danio rerio)

Author:

Estes Jenny M1,Altemara Michelle L2,Crim Marcus J3,Fletcher Craig A2,Whitaker Julia W2

Affiliation:

1. Division of Comparative Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina;, Email: estesj@email.unc.edu

2. Division of Comparative Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

3. IDEXX BioAnalytics, Columbia, Missouri

Abstract

Recent studies have shown beneficial effects of environmental enrichment (EE) for zebrafish, while infection of zebrafish with the common pathogen Pseudoloma neurophilia has negative effects. This study investigates the effects of P. neurophilia infection and EE in housing and breeding tanks on measures of behavior, growth, and reproduction. Zebrafish were socially housed and were either infected, P. neurophilia-infected (PNI) (n = 12 tanks), or SPF for P. neurophilia (SPF) (n = 24 tanks). Fish were housed with or without EE, which consisted of placing plastic plants in the tanks; sprigs from plants were placed in half of the breeding tanks for half of breedings, alternating breeding tanks without EE weekly. Behavioral testing included the Novel Tank Diving Test (NTT) and Light/Dark Preference Test (LDT) conducted prior to breeding. At the end of the study, biometric data were collected. Histopathology and molecular analysis for common diseases in fish confirmed that SPF fish remained SPF and that fish from all PNI tanks were infected. PNI fish produced significantly fewer eggs and had lower body weights and lengths than did SPF fish. Fish with EE had longer body lengths, than did fish without EE, and male fish had longer body lengths than female fish. The biometric results and reproductive measures show that SPF fish exhibited better growth and suggest that EE in housing tanks could improve fish growth. The behavioral test results were inconclusive regard- ing whether infection status or EE altered anxiety-like behavior. Our results support other recent studies showing negative effects of P. neurophilia infection on zebrafish.

Publisher

American Association for Laboratory Animal Science

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

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