PHYSIOLOGICAL-RESPONSES OF JUVENILE WALLEYES TO HANDLING STRESS WITH RECOVERY IN SALINE WATER

Citation
Ba. Barton et Re. Zitzow, PHYSIOLOGICAL-RESPONSES OF JUVENILE WALLEYES TO HANDLING STRESS WITH RECOVERY IN SALINE WATER, The Progressive fish-culturist, 57(4), 1995, pp. 267-276
Citations number
44
Categorie Soggetti
Fisheries
ISSN journal
00330779
Volume
57
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
267 - 276
Database
ISI
SICI code
0033-0779(1995)57:4<267:POJWTH>2.0.ZU;2-Q
Abstract
Juvenile walleyes (Stizostedion vitreum) were subjected to a 30-s net handling to determine their physiological stress responses and differe ntial recovery in freshwater (FW) and saline water (SW; 0.5% NaCl). Pl asma cortisol rose from 11 +/- 4.4 ng/mL (mean +/- SE) to 286 +/- 40 n g/mL within 15 min of handling, and blood lymphocyte-erythrocyte (RBC) ratios decreased from 40 +/- 6.0 per thousand RBCs to 13 +/- 0.7 in 3 h. Plasma cortisol recovered more quickly (e.g., 123 +/- 22 ng/mL in FW versus 44 +/- 7.1 in SW at 3 h) and plasma osmolality was less affe cted (e.g., 269 +/- 4.5 in FW versus 283 +/- 4.7 milliosmol/kg in SW a t 6 h) in fish during recovery in SW compared with those in FW. Howeve r, declines in lymphocyte-RBC ratios appeared unmodified by salt use. Confining fish during recovery evoked a second increase in plasma cort isol in both FW and SW, but the increase was less in SW (186 +/- 26 an d 118 +/- 11 ng/mL, respectively). Plasma osmolality remained unchange d in fish held in SW, and the increase in the neutrophil-RBC ratio evi dent in confined fish held in FW was moderated in SW An increase in th e thrombocyte-RBC ratio occurred in handled fish during recovery in FW without confinement but not in confined fish. The use of salt in the recovery medium did not attenuate corticosteroid responses of walleyes to handling, but salt may have allowed the fish to recover more quick ly and eliminated the osmoregulatory imbalance often associated with a cute stress.