Artículo

Estamos trabajando para incorporar este artículo al repositorio
Consulte el artículo en la página del editor
Consulte la política de Acceso Abierto del editor

Abstract:

The effects of stress caused by low temperature, high salinities, and a combination of both low temperatures and high salinities were evaluated in advanced (~. 5. g) juvenile freshwater crayfish (Cherax quadricarinatus). Ten animals were weighed and assigned to each of the following combination of two temperature and three salinity treatments: 27 °C (optimum for this species) or 20 °C and 0, 5, and 10. g/L salt concentrations. After 30. days in each treatment, oxygen consumption and weight were recorded, together with hemolymph levels of glucose, sodium, potassium, and free amino acids (FAA). Glycogen level was determined in hepatopancreas and abdominal muscle, while FAA levels were measured in abdominal muscle and hemolymph. A significant decrease of weight gain was seen at the combination of 20 °C and 10. g/L salinity. A marked hyperglycemia was seen at the lower temperature, at any salinity tested. At the same temperature, there was a concomitant decrease of glycogen, in both hepatopancreas and muscle. Both sodium and potassium hemolymphatic levels significantly increased with increasing salinity, but only at 20 °C. No changes were seen in hemolymphatic FAA levels, but they increased in abdominal muscle at higher salinities, in correspondence with the sodium hemolymphatic increase, in order to regulate cellular osmolarity. Although advanced juveniles of C. quadricarinatus did not exhibit reduced survival or growth at 20 °C or 10. g/L salinity, the combination of relatively low temperature and high salinity significantly reduces growth, suggesting that the combination of these two factors is a stressful condition for these crayfish juveniles. © 2011 Elsevier B.V.

Registro:

Documento: Artículo
Título:Survival, growth, and physiological responses of advanced juvenile freshwater crayfish (Cherax quadricarinatus), reared at low temperature and high salinities
Autor:Prymaczok, N.C.; Chaulet, A.; Medesani, D.A.; Rodríguez, E.M.
Filiación:Dept. of Biodiversity and Experimental Biology, FCEyN - University of Buenos Aires, Ciudad Universitaria, Pab. II, C1428EHA, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Palabras clave:Cherax quadricarinatus; Metabolites; Salinity; Stress; Temperature; concentration (composition); crayfish; environmental stress; growth rate; juvenile; low temperature; metabolite; muscle; osmosis; oxygen consumption; physiological response; potassium; rearing; salinity; sodium; survival; weight; Animalia; Astacoidea; Cherax quadricarinatus
Año:2012
Volumen:334-337
Página de inicio:176
Página de fin:181
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2011.12.032
Título revista:Aquaculture
Título revista abreviado:Aquaculture
ISSN:00448486
CODEN:AQCLA
Registro:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00448486_v334-337_n_p176_Prymaczok

Referencias:

  • Austin, C.M., Effect of temperature and salinity on the survival and growth of juvenile redclaw (Cherax quadricarinatus) (1995) Freshwater Crayfish, 10, pp. 419-426
  • Barki, A., Karplus, I., Size rank and growth potential in redclaw crayfish (Cherax quadricarinatus): are stunted juveniles suitable for grow-out? (2004) Aquaculture Research, 35, pp. 559-567
  • Bayly, I.A.E., Williams, W.D., (1973) Inland Waters and Their Ecology, , Logman, Australia
  • Chang, E.S., Keller, R., Chang, S.A., Quantification of crustacean hyperglycemic hormone by ELISA in hemolymph of the lobster, Homarus americanus, following various stresses (1998) General and Comparative Endocrinology, 111, pp. 359-366
  • Dooley, P.C., Long, B.M., West, J.M., Amino acids in hemolymph, single fibres and whole muscle from the claw of freshwater crayfish acclimated to different osmotic environments (2000) Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 127 A, pp. 155-165
  • Fanjul-Moles, M.L., Biochemical and functional aspects of crustaceans hyperglycemic hormone in decapod crustaceans: review and update (2006) Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 142 C, pp. 390-400
  • Faria, S.C., Augusto, A.S., Mc Namara, J.C., Intra- and extracellular osmotic regulation in the hololimnetic Caridea and Anomura: a phylogenetic perspective on the conquest of fresh water by the decapod Crustacea (2011) Journal of Comparative Physiology, 181 B, pp. 175-186
  • Fisher, G.H., Arias, L., Quesada, L., D'Aniello, S., Errico, F., Di Fiore, M.M., D'Aniello, A., A fast and sensitive method for measuring picomole levels of total free amino acids in very small amounts of biological tissues (2001) Amino Acids, 20, pp. 163-173
  • Freire, C.A., Onken, H., McNamara, J.C., A structure-function analysis of ion transport in crustacean gills and excretory organs (2008) Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 151 A, pp. 272-304
  • Geary, N., Langhans, W., Scharrer, E., Metabolic concomitants of glucagons induced suppression of feeding in the rat (1981) American Journal of Physiology, 241, pp. R330-R335
  • Gilles, R., "Compensatory" organic osmolytes in high osmolarity and dehydration stresses: history and perspectives (1997) Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 117 A, pp. 279-290
  • Jones, C.M., (1997) The Biology and Aquaculture Potential of the Tropical Freshwater Crayfish Cherax quadricarinatus, , Department of Primary Industries, Brisbane, Australia
  • Karplus, I., Zoran, M., Milstein, A., Harpaz, S., Eran, Y., Joseph, D., Sagi, A., Culture of the Australian red-claw crayfish (Cherax quadricarinatus) in Israel III. Survival in earthen ponds under ambient winter temperatures (1998) Aquaculture, 166, pp. 259-267
  • Karplus, I., Gideon, H., Barki, A., Shifting the natural spring-summer breeding season of the Australian freshwater crayfish Cherax quadricarinatus into the winter by environmental manipulations (2003) Aquaculture, 220, pp. 277-286
  • Konosu, S., Yamaguchi, K., The flavour components in fish and shellfish (1982) Chemistry and Biochemistry of Marine Food Products, pp. 367-404. , The Avi Publishing Company Westport, Connecticut, R.E. Martin (Ed.)
  • Lago-Lestón, A., Ponce, E., Muñoz, M.A., Cloning and expression of hyperglycemic (CHH) and molt-inhibiting (MIH) hormones mRNAs from the eyestalk of shrimps of Litopenaeus vannamei grown in different temperature and salinity conditions (2007) Aquaculture, 270, pp. 343-357
  • Lorenzon, S., Edomi, P., Giulianini, P.G., Mettulio, R., Ferrero, E.A., Variation of crustacean hyperglycemic hormone (CHH) level in the eyestalk and haemolymph of the shrimp Palaemon elegans following stress (2004) Journal of Experimental Biology, 207, pp. 4205-4213
  • Lorenzon, S., Giulianini, P.G., Martinis, M., Ferrero, E.A., Stress effect of different temperatures and air exposure during transport on physiological profiles in the American lobster Homarus americanus (2007) Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 147 A, pp. 94-102
  • Mantel, L., Farmer, L.L., Osmotic and ionic regulation (1983) The Biology of Crustacea, 5, pp. 53-161. , Academic Press, New York
  • McCoid, V., Miget, R., Finne, G., Effect of environmental salinity on the free amino acid composition and concentration in Penaeid shrimp (1984) Journal of Food Science, 49, pp. 327-330
  • Meade, M.E., Doeller, J.E., Kraus, D.W., Watts, S.A., Effects of temperature and salinity on weight gain, oxygen consumption rate, and growth efficiency in juvenile red-claw crayfish Cherax quadricarinatus (2002) Journal of World Aquaculture Society, 33, pp. 188-198
  • Medley, P.B., Nelson, R.G., Hatch, L.U., Rouse, D.B., Pinto, G.F., Economic feasibility and risk analysis of Australian red claw crayfish Cherax quadricarinatus aquaculture in the southeastern United States (1994) J. World Aquaculture Soc., 25, pp. 135-146
  • Newsom, J.E., Davis, K.B., Osmotic responses of hemolymph in red swamp crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) and white river crayfish (P. zonangulus) to changes in temperature and salinity (1994) Aquaculture, 126, pp. 373-381
  • Papadopoulos, L.S., Finne, G., Effect of environmental salinity on sensory characteristics of penaeid shrimp (1986) Journal of Food Science, 51, pp. 812-814
  • Parmegiani Jahn, M., Cavagni, G.M., Kaiser, D., Kucharski, L.C., Osmotic effect of choline and glycine betaine on the gills and hepatopancreas of the Chasmagnathus granulata crab submitted to hyperosmotic stress (2006) Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 334, pp. 1-9
  • Prymaczok, N.C., Medesani, D.A., Rodríguez, E.M., Levels of ions and organic metabolites in the adult freshwater crayfish, Cherax quadricarinatus, exposed to different salinities (2008) Mar. Freshwat. Behav. Physiol., 48, pp. 121-130
  • Randall, D.J., Burggren, W., French, K., (2002) Eckert Animal Physiology: Mechanisms and Adaptations, , W.H. Freeman and Company, New York
  • Serrano, L., Blanvillain, G., Soyez, D., Charmantier, G., Grousset, E., Aujoulat, F., Spanings-Pierrot, C., Putative involvement of crustacean hyperglycemic hormone isoforms in the neuroendocrine mediation of osmoregulation in the crayfish Astacus leptodactylus (2003) Journal of Experimental Biology, 206, pp. 979-988
  • Sokal, R.R., Rohlf, F.J., (1981) Biometry, , Freeman, New York
  • Sook Chung, J., Zmora, N., Katyama, H., Tsutsui, N., Crustacean hyperglycemic hormone (CHH) neuropeptides family: functions, titer, and binding to target tissues (2010) General and Comparative Endocrinology, 166, pp. 447-454
  • Spanings-Pierrot, C., Soyez, D., Van Herp, F., Gompel, M., Skaret, G., Grousset, E., Charmantier, G., Involvement of crustacean hyperglucemic hormone in the control of gill ion transport in the crab Pachygrapsus marmoratus (2000) General and Comparative Endocrinology, 119, pp. 340-350
  • Van Handel, E., Estimation of glycogen in small amount of tissue (1965) Analytical Biochemistry, 11, pp. 256-265
  • Vogt, G., Functional anatomy (2002) Biology of Freshwater Crayfish, pp. 64-87. , Blackwell Science, New York, D.M. Holdrich (Ed.)
  • Walker, S.J., Neill, W.H., Lawrence, A.L., Gatlin, D.M., Effect of salinity and body weight on ecophysiological performance of the Pacific white shrimp (Litopenaeus vannamei) (2009) Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 380, pp. 119-124
  • Webster, S.G., Measurement of crustacean hyperglycaemic hormone levels in the edible crab Cancer pagurus during emersion stress (1996) Journal of Experimental Biology, 199, pp. 1579-1585
  • Wheatly, M.G., Gannon, A., Ion regulation in crayfish: freshwater adaptation and the problem of molting (1995) American Zoologist, 35, pp. 49-59
  • Wheatly, M.G., de Souza, S.C.R., Hart, M.K., Related changes in hemolymph acid-base status, electrolytes, and ecdysone in intermoult crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) at 23°C during extra-cellular acidosis induced by exposure to air, hyperoxia, or acid (1996) J. Crust. Biol., 16, pp. 216-277

Citas:

---------- APA ----------
Prymaczok, N.C., Chaulet, A., Medesani, D.A. & Rodríguez, E.M. (2012) . Survival, growth, and physiological responses of advanced juvenile freshwater crayfish (Cherax quadricarinatus), reared at low temperature and high salinities. Aquaculture, 334-337, 176-181.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2011.12.032
---------- CHICAGO ----------
Prymaczok, N.C., Chaulet, A., Medesani, D.A., Rodríguez, E.M. "Survival, growth, and physiological responses of advanced juvenile freshwater crayfish (Cherax quadricarinatus), reared at low temperature and high salinities" . Aquaculture 334-337 (2012) : 176-181.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2011.12.032
---------- MLA ----------
Prymaczok, N.C., Chaulet, A., Medesani, D.A., Rodríguez, E.M. "Survival, growth, and physiological responses of advanced juvenile freshwater crayfish (Cherax quadricarinatus), reared at low temperature and high salinities" . Aquaculture, vol. 334-337, 2012, pp. 176-181.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2011.12.032
---------- VANCOUVER ----------
Prymaczok, N.C., Chaulet, A., Medesani, D.A., Rodríguez, E.M. Survival, growth, and physiological responses of advanced juvenile freshwater crayfish (Cherax quadricarinatus), reared at low temperature and high salinities. Aquaculture. 2012;334-337:176-181.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2011.12.032