Oxygen Uptake and Osmotic Balance of Atlantic Salmon in Relation to Exercise and Salinity Acclimation

The fish gill is subject to an osmorespiratory compromise in physiologically demanding situations where conditions that favor gas exchange may compromise osmotic balance, especially when large gradients between the blood and the aquatic environment are present. Fish in isosmotic water should therefo...

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Main Authors: Malthe Hvas, Tom Ole Nilsen, Frode Oppedal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2018.00368/full
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spelling doaj-561204ce31184151b8fbf1b693a7c9522020-11-24T20:50:42ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452018-10-01510.3389/fmars.2018.00368405251Oxygen Uptake and Osmotic Balance of Atlantic Salmon in Relation to Exercise and Salinity AcclimationMalthe Hvas0Tom Ole Nilsen1Frode Oppedal2Institute of Marine Research, Matredal, NorwayUni Research Environment, Bergen, NorwayInstitute of Marine Research, Matredal, NorwayThe fish gill is subject to an osmorespiratory compromise in physiologically demanding situations where conditions that favor gas exchange may compromise osmotic balance, especially when large gradients between the blood and the aquatic environment are present. Fish in isosmotic water should therefore be less restricted by an osmorespiratory compromise, which should improve aerobic performance. To investigate this hypothesis, Atlantic salmon were acclimated for minimum 3 weeks to freshwater, near isosmotic brackish water or sea water, and tested in groups of 10 in a large swim tunnel respirometer to assess metabolic rates, swimming capacity and hematological parameters. Oxygen uptake rates and the critical swimming speed were similar between treatments. However, osmolality and plasma [ions] before and after swim trials, and subsequent recovery differed. Fish in sea water experienced a substantially larger osmotic disturbance in the swim trials, which had increased further 3 h post-fatigue, while fish in lower salinities were approaching full recovery. Swim trials increased plasma cortisol levels, which may modulate increased gas transfer and facilitate beneficial ion regulation in both low and high salinities. Swimming also increased hematocrit and hemoglobin concentration that returned to control levels after recovery, suggesting recruitment of erythrocytes via splenic contraction. These results show that Atlantic salmon do not elicit a clear salinity optimum in terms of metabolic and locomotory advantages. Although, swimming in sea water imposes larger osmoregulatory challenges which may have implications for repeated swim challenges. Hence, Atlantic salmon are well-equipped to minimize the potential restrictions of an osmorespiratory compromise on aerobic performance, and more so in brackish and freshwater.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2018.00368/fullUcritaerobic scopeswim tunnel respirometryosmorespiratory compromisestress response
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Malthe Hvas
Tom Ole Nilsen
Frode Oppedal
spellingShingle Malthe Hvas
Tom Ole Nilsen
Frode Oppedal
Oxygen Uptake and Osmotic Balance of Atlantic Salmon in Relation to Exercise and Salinity Acclimation
Frontiers in Marine Science
Ucrit
aerobic scope
swim tunnel respirometry
osmorespiratory compromise
stress response
author_facet Malthe Hvas
Tom Ole Nilsen
Frode Oppedal
author_sort Malthe Hvas
title Oxygen Uptake and Osmotic Balance of Atlantic Salmon in Relation to Exercise and Salinity Acclimation
title_short Oxygen Uptake and Osmotic Balance of Atlantic Salmon in Relation to Exercise and Salinity Acclimation
title_full Oxygen Uptake and Osmotic Balance of Atlantic Salmon in Relation to Exercise and Salinity Acclimation
title_fullStr Oxygen Uptake and Osmotic Balance of Atlantic Salmon in Relation to Exercise and Salinity Acclimation
title_full_unstemmed Oxygen Uptake and Osmotic Balance of Atlantic Salmon in Relation to Exercise and Salinity Acclimation
title_sort oxygen uptake and osmotic balance of atlantic salmon in relation to exercise and salinity acclimation
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2018-10-01
description The fish gill is subject to an osmorespiratory compromise in physiologically demanding situations where conditions that favor gas exchange may compromise osmotic balance, especially when large gradients between the blood and the aquatic environment are present. Fish in isosmotic water should therefore be less restricted by an osmorespiratory compromise, which should improve aerobic performance. To investigate this hypothesis, Atlantic salmon were acclimated for minimum 3 weeks to freshwater, near isosmotic brackish water or sea water, and tested in groups of 10 in a large swim tunnel respirometer to assess metabolic rates, swimming capacity and hematological parameters. Oxygen uptake rates and the critical swimming speed were similar between treatments. However, osmolality and plasma [ions] before and after swim trials, and subsequent recovery differed. Fish in sea water experienced a substantially larger osmotic disturbance in the swim trials, which had increased further 3 h post-fatigue, while fish in lower salinities were approaching full recovery. Swim trials increased plasma cortisol levels, which may modulate increased gas transfer and facilitate beneficial ion regulation in both low and high salinities. Swimming also increased hematocrit and hemoglobin concentration that returned to control levels after recovery, suggesting recruitment of erythrocytes via splenic contraction. These results show that Atlantic salmon do not elicit a clear salinity optimum in terms of metabolic and locomotory advantages. Although, swimming in sea water imposes larger osmoregulatory challenges which may have implications for repeated swim challenges. Hence, Atlantic salmon are well-equipped to minimize the potential restrictions of an osmorespiratory compromise on aerobic performance, and more so in brackish and freshwater.
topic Ucrit
aerobic scope
swim tunnel respirometry
osmorespiratory compromise
stress response
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2018.00368/full
work_keys_str_mv AT malthehvas oxygenuptakeandosmoticbalanceofatlanticsalmoninrelationtoexerciseandsalinityacclimation
AT tomolenilsen oxygenuptakeandosmoticbalanceofatlanticsalmoninrelationtoexerciseandsalinityacclimation
AT frodeoppedal oxygenuptakeandosmoticbalanceofatlanticsalmoninrelationtoexerciseandsalinityacclimation
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