Hormonal and Osmoregulatory Aspects of Smoltification in Coho Salmon, Oncorhynchus Kisutch

Hormonal and Osmoregulatory Aspects of Smoltification in Coho Salmon, Oncorhynchus Kisutch
Author: Jennifer Lee Specker
Publisher:
Total Pages: 210
Release: 1980
Genre: Coho salmon
ISBN:

Coho salmon smolts (Oncorhynchus kisutch) were transported at low and high densities. (12 and 120 g/L) for short and long periods (4 and 12 h). Because smolts can be transplanted directly to seawater, half of the fish in each treatment were transported to tanks containing seawater and half to tanks containing freshwater. Plasma corticosteroids and glucose were elevated at unloading in all groups. Corticosteroids were still above the resting levels 24 h later, whereas glucose had returned to basal levels at this time. Potential smoltification indicators such as plasma thyroxin concentration and gill Na-K-ATPase activity were not affected by transportation. Increased corticosteroids were correlated to increased mortality in transported salmon compared to acclimated control fish when subjected to a bioassay of stress severe confinement. It is concluded that transportation induced stress in the fish regardless of hauling regimen, that increased corticosteroids may have potential as indicators of reduced performance capacity, that the greatest stress occurred during loading and the first few hours en route, and that transported coho salmon smolts seem to be equally fit for entry into freshwater or seawater. Hormones of the hypothalamic-pituitary system probably mediate the environmental changes and endogenous rhythms that regulate the timing and physiological alterations of smoltification. Because thyroid hyperactivity is a major endocrine component of smoltification, yearling coho salmon were injected with mammalian prolactin (PRL) and thyrotropin (TSH) to determine their effect on plasma thyroxin concentrations. The response of plasma thyroxin to TSH is similar from January through May in coho salmon, suggesting that the thyroid does not change in sensitivity to TSH. A dose of 0.04 to 0.07 I.U. TSH is the minimum dose sufficient to significantly increase plasma thyroxin concentration. PRL (1 to 9 I.U.) depressed plasma thyroxin levels in coho salmon parr, smolts, and post-smolts. Increased plasma thyroxin and gill Na-K-ATPase levels tentatively are considered indicative of smoltification, migratory readiness, and hence, seawater adaptability. In an experiment to consider a methodology which could be implemented at a culture facility to enhance the survival of ocean-going smolts and perhaps mitigate losses due to stunting, an abnormality of smoltification, coho salmon parr were maintained for 3 wk in water supplemented with sodium or calcium salts. Prolonged residence in sodium - supplemented freshwater increased plasma thyroxin levels and tended to elevate gill Na-K-ATPase activity. In contrast, acute exposure (24 h) to 75% seawater halved plasma thyroxin levels in coho salmon parr. Gradual acclimation to increased ambient salinity may accelerate changes in, or enhance, plasma thyroxin levels and gill Na-K-ATPase activity, and thus potentially improve the growth and survival of outmigrating smolts and reduce losses due to stunting. Plasma corticosteroid levels were determined during smoltification and in response to mammalian PRL and TSH. The interrenal tissue, which synthesizes corticosteroids, becomes hyperactive during smoltification. Exogenous PRL and TSH have no effect on plasma corticosteroid levels at any time during smoltification. Plasma corticosteroid levels increase eight-fold between early April and late May in coho salmon, concurrent with increasing gill Na-K-ATPase and seaward migration. Generally, plasma levels of thyroxin and corticosteroids are related inversely. Thyroxin levels are maximum in early April, with the onset of silvering, and corticosteroids are at minimal concentrations at this time. Thereafter, thyroxin levels decline and corticosteroids increase.

The Influence of Environmental Salinity and Growth Hormone on Coho Salmon (Oncorhynchus Kisutch (Walbaum)) Osmoregulatory Physiology

The Influence of Environmental Salinity and Growth Hormone on Coho Salmon (Oncorhynchus Kisutch (Walbaum)) Osmoregulatory Physiology
Author: Alexander Mitchell Espy Schreiber
Publisher:
Total Pages: 192
Release: 1994
Genre: Coho salmon
ISBN:

"Salmon migrating from freshwater (FW) to saltwater (SW) must maintain a constant internal osmotic environment to survive their external salinity transition. Up to 40% of SW introduced coho become stunted and eventually die. With the exceptions of growth hormone (GH), hypocalcin, and possibly epinephrine, stunts maintain a hypoendocrine status. Nine hundred yearling coho salmon were raised in SW for five months; 100 salmon were reared in FW for the same duration. After five months in SW 12% of the population developed into stunts as defined morphologically by low body weight and the retention of parr marks. Early stunts hypoosmoregulated more effectively than their smelt counterparts (significantly higher gill chloride cell activity, higher mean intestinal water/ion transport, significantly lower blood osmotic pressures), but over a period of several days displayed fatal osmoregulatory failure (significantly decreased gill chloride cell activity, decreased mean intestinal water/ion transport, significantly increased blood osmotic pressures). Increased liver potassium in stunts correlated positively with blood osmotic pressure and may be a causal agent of osmoregulatory dysfunction. Elevated liver potassium was found to be a probable function of stress (possibly epinephrine mediated), but not of blood osmotic pressure. Muscle potassium concentrations appear to be a direct function of the protein to fat ratio in the muscle, with healthy smelts possessing low muscle K+ and stunts higher muscle K+. Stunt muscle K+ was not influenced by elevated blood osmotic pressure. Fish allowed to smelt in FW (after four months) appear to revert back to the physiological form of a parr. Coho which smoltified in SW, and were then reacclimated to FW for one month retained elevated intestinal water transport rates (J[subscript v]) characteristic of a SW fish, but otherwise resembled the FW reared smelts. After FW reacclimation and hormone level normalization, stunts and smelts were exposed to 67% SW for 12 hours. During this time stunts maintained lower blood osmotic pressures than the smelts; this can be attributed to a reduced stunt intestinal J[subscript v] which was lacking in the smelts. Salmon growth hormone (sGH) injected intramuscularly for three weeks increased gill chloride cell activity, reduced blood osmotic pressure, and raised mean intestinal J[subscript v] rates in stunts and smelts placed in 67% SW for 12 hours. These characteristics resemble early SW stunt physiology, and thus may help implicate naturally increased GH in SW stunts as an osmoregulatory crutch to an otherwise hypoendocrine condition. Finally, after studying the relationship of fish size to migratory behavior within several different species, it seems that stunt distributions could potentially divide certain species with moderate degrees of anadromy into separate migratory and non-migratory populations. Considering the high amount of energy required to sustain anadromous behavior, a more efficient non- migratory population could be selected for (given adequate food availability). Viewed in this way stunts might be considered a population in transition to full FW residency, rather than just fish with a hypoosmoregulatory dysfunction"--Document.

Stress, Osmoregulation, and the Hormone Cortisol in Yearling Coho Salmon, Oncorhynchus Kisutch

Stress, Osmoregulation, and the Hormone Cortisol in Yearling Coho Salmon, Oncorhynchus Kisutch
Author: Joseph Michael Redding
Publisher:
Total Pages: 276
Release: 1982
Genre: Coho salmon
ISBN:

Freshwater (FW) and seawater (SW) acclimated yearling coho salmon, Oncorhynchus kisutch, were subjected to severe confinement stress in FW, SW, or a medium (1/3 SW) that was approximately isosmotic to the fish's blood. Chronic stress caused osmotic imbalances in FW and SW, but not in 1/3 SW. In SW, blood osmolarity and electrolyte concentrations increased, while in FW they generally decreased. Acclimation conditions (FW or SW) before stress influenced the severity and duration of the osmotic imbalance. Confinement stress greatly amplified the osmotic imbalance following transfer from FW to SW compared to that in unconfined fish whose water supply was switched from FW to SW. Plasma cortisol levels during stress were also affected by acclimation conditions and ambient salinity. Plasma cortisol levels increased during acclimation to SW. Maxmimal concentrations of approximately 220 ng/ml occurred within 1.5 h after the water source was switched from FW to SW. After 21 d in SW, cortisol levels were still slightly elevated (23 ng/ml) compared to those in FW control fish (4 ng/ml). Chronic treatment with cortisol lowered gill Na+-K+-ATPase levels in FW fish but did not affect plasma osmolarity, Na, K, Ca, or Mg levels in fish in FW or during acclimation to SW. Thyroxine (T) and triiodothyronine (T3) levels in plasma increased significantly after ambient water was switched from FW to SW. Maximal levels of T3 (8.0 ng/ml) occurred within 12 h after the initial exposure to SW, followed by a return to FW basal levels (4.0 ng/mi) within 24 h. Plasma T levels were higher than FW control levels (4.2 ng/ml) for at least 120 h after exposure to SW; peak levels (14.3 ng/ml) occurred at 12 and 72 h. Chronic treatment with cortisol significantly lowered plasma T3 levels in FW and during acclimation to SW; but it had no significant effect on T concentrations. The metabolic clearance rate of corticosteroids determined after a single injection of 3H-cortisol was higher in SW- than in FW-acclimated fish. Uptake and retention of corticosteroids in liver, gill filaments, and gall bladder bile was greater in SW than in FW fish. The stress of long-term (5 d), but not short-term (12 h), continuous confinement apparently increased the clearance rate of corticosteroids in both FW and SW fish. Chronic, but not acute, administration of exogenous cortisol at physiological levels appeared to increase the clearance rate of corticosteroids in FW fish.

Endocrines and Osmoregulation

Endocrines and Osmoregulation
Author: P.J. Bentley
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 312
Release: 2013-03-14
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3662050145

From a review of the previous edition: "I strongly recommend it as an essential reading and reference book for younger and older workers alike". Nature