STRIPED BASS EXERCISE AND HANDLING STRESS IN FRESH-WATER - PHYSIOLOGICAL-RESPONSES TO RECOVERY ENVIRONMENT

Citation
Jj. Cech et al., STRIPED BASS EXERCISE AND HANDLING STRESS IN FRESH-WATER - PHYSIOLOGICAL-RESPONSES TO RECOVERY ENVIRONMENT, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 125(2), 1996, pp. 308-320
Citations number
64
Categorie Soggetti
Fisheries
ISSN journal
00028487
Volume
125
Issue
2
Year of publication
1996
Pages
308 - 320
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-8487(1996)125:2<308:SBEAHS>2.0.ZU;2-#
Abstract
Freshwater-acclimated subadult striped bass Morone saxatilis that had undergone cannulation of the dorsal aorta were exercised against a wat er current al 100 cm . sec(-1) (2-3 fork lengths-sec(-1)) for 5 min in freshwater and placed in Row-through holding boxes in a recovery tank at 25 degrees C. Recovery tanks contained water with either 0 (freshw ater, FW), 10 (brackish water, BW), or 30 (seawater, SW)g NaCl . L(-1) or 10 mM NaHCO3-. L(-1) (buffered freshwater, BFW). A postexercise me tabolic acidosis (decreased postexercise blood pH and increased blood lactate) was compensated within 2-4 h in all recovery environments exc ept SW. Arterial O-2 tension and cortisol, glucose, and hemoglobin con centrations transiently increased immediately after exercise, and arte rial CO2 tension and HCO3- generally decreased. Plasma Cl- did not cha nge until 2-4 h postexercise, when decreases (FW and BFW), an increase (SW), or no change (BW) indicated passive fluid or Cl- exchanges with the recovery environment. Increasing plasma Cl- in the SW recovery en vironment inhibited HCO3- retention or uptake, which slowed pH compens ation. In summary, postexercise acidoses were corrected and ionic imba lances were minimized by recovery in brackishwater (10 g NaCl . L(-1)) .