Author:
Brauner C. J.,Iwama G. K.,Randall D. J.
Abstract
The critical swimming velocity (Ucrit) and haematology of wild and hatchery-reared coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) juveniles were examined in either fresh water or seawater following a 24-h seawater challenge, at the time of smoltification. In fresh water, wild smolts swam faster than hatchery-reared fish but this could largely be accounted for by scaling for body size. Transfer to seawater significantly elevated resting plasma [Na+] and reduced subsequent Ucritin hatchery fish (by 12%) relative to that determined in fresh water but had no significant effect on resting plasma [Na+] and Ucritin wild fish. Swimming the fish a second time in seawater after the initial 2-h exercise period resulted in a significant reduction in Ucritrelative to that in fresh water in both wild fish (16%) and hatchery fish (a further 14%); this relatively greater impairment in Ucritin hatchery fish was due to a reduced hypo-osmoregulatory ability following seawater transfer that impairs conditions for muscle contractility and aerobic metabolism. Aerobic metabolism in seawater-exposed fish was affected in part through a reduction in haematocrit and an increase in plasma volume, reducing oxygen carrying capacity of the blood relative to conditions in fresh water.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
97 articles.
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