P. Amcoff et al., Thiamine (vitamin B-1) concentrations in salmon (Salmo salar), brown trout(Salmo trutta) and cod (Gadus morhua) from the Baltic sea, AMBIO, 28(1), 1999, pp. 48-54
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology,"Environmental Engineering & Energy
During recent decades several Baltic fish species have been affected by poo
r reproductive success. The sea-run Baltic salmon populations are affected
by the M74 syndrome, an early life-stage mortality associated with low thia
mine (vitamin B-1) concentrations in the offspring. In order to study wheth
er sea-run brown trout with symptoms and mortalities similar to M74 also su
ffer from low thiamine concentrations, analyses of thiamine were performed.
Also, tissues of Baltic cod were analyzed for their content of thiamine. T
his study confirms that Baltic salmon that are affected by M74 suffer from
low thiamine levels and that the temporal onset of the development of M74 m
ay be correlated to the thiamine concentration in the eyed egg. Also, thiam
ine concentrations of muscle and ovaries from females that produced offspri
ng with M74 were significantly lower than those of females that produced he
althy progeny, which indicates that M74 may be a maternally transmitted thi
amine deficiency. Preliminary data from sea-run Baltic brown trout showed t
hat yolk-sac fry with symptoms that resembled those of M74-lethargy, darken
ing of skin and 100% mortality-had low mean thiamine concentrations (0.14 n
mol g(-1) in 1994 and 0.34 in 1998) compared with those of healthy progeny
(4.4 nmol g(-1) in 1994 and 3.9 in 1998). This indicates that some family g
roups of Baltic brown trout may be affected by a reproduction disorder rela
ted to thiamine deficiency. In spawning Baltic cod, hepatic and ovarian thi
amine concentrations showed great variance, with values ranging from 0.56 t
o 4.7, and 3.8 to 30 nmol g(-1), respectively. Whether Baltic cod also suff
er from mortality associated with a thiamine deficiency is not known.