Physiological effects of water flow induced swimming exercise in seabream Sparus aurata
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Author
Palstra, Arjan P.
Kruijt, Leo
Jéhannet, Pauline
Pérez-Sánchez, Jaume
Dirks, Ron P.
Publication date
2020-12-07ISSN
1664-042X
Abstract
A longer on-land rearing period of Gilthead seabream Sparus aurata before transfer to sea-cages would allow the farmer to benefit from exercise-enhanced growth, resilience, and robustness as induced by increasing water flow in the tanks. In this study, the physiological effects of flow-conditioning were investigated by subjecting large groups of experimental fish to minimal flow or to flow regimes inducing swimming exercise at 1 or 2 body length (BL) s−1 for a period of 8 months (February–October) in 1,500 L tanks. Fish representing the three treatment groups were then used for: (1) a stress challenge netting test and plasma cortisol measurement (baseline, peaking, and recovery levels), (2) blood plasma measurements of glucose, triglycerides, lactate, cholesterol, growth hormone (GH), and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1), and (3) heart and muscle gene expression of the GH and IGF1 receptors and the muscle transcriptome by deep RNA sequencing (RNAseq). Fish size after 8 months of flow conditioning was 92 ± 27 g body weight (BW) for fish under minimal flow, 106 ± 24 g BW (+15%) at 1 BL s−1, and 125 ± 27 g BW (+36%) at 2 BL s−1. Flow conditioning at 1 BL s−1 provided optimal conditions for growth and uniformity, but also stress (lowest baseline plasma cortisol), robustness (higher condition factor and larger hearts), and energy mobilization (increased plasma glucose). Although flow enhanced growth linearly with swimming speed, also the percentage of lordotic fish increased with exercise, particularly high for swimming at 2 BL s−1. The absence of important differences in plasma GH and IGF1, and expression levels of their receptors in heart and white skeletal muscle, indicated that other factors may be involved in growth enhancement. RNAseq of the white skeletal muscle showed upregulated expression of genes involved in muscle contraction, muscle development and its molecular regulation, and immune genes that may play a role in the muscle repair mechanism. An exercise regime of swimming at 1 BL s−1 can be considered as optimal for farming robust seabream although the increase of skeletal deformities should be avoided.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
637 - Produce of domestic (farmyard) animals and game
Pages
13
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Is part of
Frontiers in Physiology
Citation
Palstra, Arjan P., Ana Roque, Leo Kruijt, Pauline Jéhannet, Jaume Pérez-Sánchez, and Ron P. Dirks. 2020. "Physiological Effects Of Water Flow Induced Swimming Exercise In Seabream Sparus Aurata". Frontiers In Physiology 11. doi:10.3389/fphys.2020.610049.
Grant agreement number
EC/H2020/727610/EU/Consumer driver production: integrating innovative approaches for competitive and sustainable performance across the Mediterranean aquaculture value chain/PerformFISH
EC/H2020/727315/EU/Mediterranean Aquaculture Integrated Development/MedAID
Program
Aqüicultura
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [2239]
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/