A methodological evaluation of the determination of critical oxygen threshold in an estuarine teleost

One measure of hypoxia tolerance is the critical oxygen threshold, Pcrit, which is the point where standard metabolism can no longer be maintained through aerobic processes. Traditionally, Pcrit was determined using closed respirometry, whereby the fish's respiration naturally lowered O2. More...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Benjamin Negrete, Andrew J. Esbaugh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Company of Biologists 2019-11-01
Series:Biology Open
Subjects:
Online Access:http://bio.biologists.org/content/8/11/bio045310
id doaj-f7a5f0869e3a40eba405fa69fcea7b4f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f7a5f0869e3a40eba405fa69fcea7b4f2021-06-02T18:02:22ZengThe Company of BiologistsBiology Open2046-63902019-11-0181110.1242/bio.045310045310A methodological evaluation of the determination of critical oxygen threshold in an estuarine teleostBenjamin Negrete0Andrew J. Esbaugh1 Department of Marine Science, Marine Science Institute, The University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, TX 78373, USA Department of Marine Science, Marine Science Institute, The University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, TX 78373, USA One measure of hypoxia tolerance is the critical oxygen threshold, Pcrit, which is the point where standard metabolism can no longer be maintained through aerobic processes. Traditionally, Pcrit was determined using closed respirometry, whereby the fish's respiration naturally lowered O2. More recently, intermittent flow techniques have been adopted, where N2 is used to displace O2, which ostensibly reduces end-product build-up. This study used a paired design on the marine teleost, red drum. Pcrit is comparable between closed (4.6±0.2 kPa; mean±s.e.m.) and intermittent flow (4.4±0.2 kPa; mean±s.e.m.) respirometry. pCO2, ammonia and pH changes within the chamber were measured prior to the onset of Pcrit and at the end of a typical Pcrit trial and revealed changes in water chemistry in both closed and intermittent flow. Pcrit values were similar in both methods of hypoxia induction regardless of subsequent water chemistry changes that occurred in both methods.http://bio.biologists.org/content/8/11/bio045310hypoxiatolerancefishrespirometrynitrogenpcrit
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benjamin Negrete
Andrew J. Esbaugh
spellingShingle Benjamin Negrete
Andrew J. Esbaugh
A methodological evaluation of the determination of critical oxygen threshold in an estuarine teleost
Biology Open
hypoxia
tolerance
fish
respirometry
nitrogen
pcrit
author_facet Benjamin Negrete
Andrew J. Esbaugh
author_sort Benjamin Negrete
title A methodological evaluation of the determination of critical oxygen threshold in an estuarine teleost
title_short A methodological evaluation of the determination of critical oxygen threshold in an estuarine teleost
title_full A methodological evaluation of the determination of critical oxygen threshold in an estuarine teleost
title_fullStr A methodological evaluation of the determination of critical oxygen threshold in an estuarine teleost
title_full_unstemmed A methodological evaluation of the determination of critical oxygen threshold in an estuarine teleost
title_sort methodological evaluation of the determination of critical oxygen threshold in an estuarine teleost
publisher The Company of Biologists
series Biology Open
issn 2046-6390
publishDate 2019-11-01
description One measure of hypoxia tolerance is the critical oxygen threshold, Pcrit, which is the point where standard metabolism can no longer be maintained through aerobic processes. Traditionally, Pcrit was determined using closed respirometry, whereby the fish's respiration naturally lowered O2. More recently, intermittent flow techniques have been adopted, where N2 is used to displace O2, which ostensibly reduces end-product build-up. This study used a paired design on the marine teleost, red drum. Pcrit is comparable between closed (4.6±0.2 kPa; mean±s.e.m.) and intermittent flow (4.4±0.2 kPa; mean±s.e.m.) respirometry. pCO2, ammonia and pH changes within the chamber were measured prior to the onset of Pcrit and at the end of a typical Pcrit trial and revealed changes in water chemistry in both closed and intermittent flow. Pcrit values were similar in both methods of hypoxia induction regardless of subsequent water chemistry changes that occurred in both methods.
topic hypoxia
tolerance
fish
respirometry
nitrogen
pcrit
url http://bio.biologists.org/content/8/11/bio045310
work_keys_str_mv AT benjaminnegrete amethodologicalevaluationofthedeterminationofcriticaloxygenthresholdinanestuarineteleost
AT andrewjesbaugh amethodologicalevaluationofthedeterminationofcriticaloxygenthresholdinanestuarineteleost
AT benjaminnegrete methodologicalevaluationofthedeterminationofcriticaloxygenthresholdinanestuarineteleost
AT andrewjesbaugh methodologicalevaluationofthedeterminationofcriticaloxygenthresholdinanestuarineteleost
_version_ 1721402464290209792