Annual variation in energy reserves in male three-spined stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatm L. (Pisces, Gasterosteidae)
Autor: | R. H. C. Strang, R. Y. Thomson, S. Chellappa, Felicity A. Huntingford |
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Rok vydání: | 1989 |
Předmět: |
education.field_of_study
Gonad biology Glycogen Ecology Population Gasterosteus Aquatic Science biology.organism_classification Gonadosomatic Index chemistry.chemical_compound Animal science medicine.anatomical_structure chemistry medicine Seasonal breeder Body region medicine.symptom education Weight gain Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics |
Zdroj: | Journal of Fish Biology. 35:275-286 |
ISSN: | 1095-8649 0022-1112 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1095-8649.1989.tb02976.x |
Popis: | Wet and dry weights of tissue were measured and concentrations of glycogen, lipid and protein were estimated for the liver, gonad and carcass of male sticklebacks from an annual population collected each month over one complete year. In young-of-the-year there is one period of rapid weight gain, in all three body regions (liver, carcass and gonads) but particularly of the carcass, in the autumn and a second in spring and early summer. This is accompanied by an increase in the water content of all three body regions. The gonadosomatic index also increases sharply in spring and early summer. Young sticklebacks accumulate lipid and glycogen slowly during the autumn and winter of their first year of life and more rapidly from late winter to early summer. Thus, the period of most rapid accumulation of these reserves coincides with the time when body weight and gonad maturation are also increasing sharply. Lipid and glycogen levels fall during the reproductive season in those males that breed, so that by July they are reduced to 43% and 37% (respectively) of their peak values in May. Levels of protein increase throughout the year as the fish grow, but in breeding males by July the concentration of protein in the carcass falls to 70% of pre-breeding levels. Breeding males therefore reach the end of the reproductive season with their total energy reserves severely reduced, and consequently they suffer a very high mortality. In contrast, adult males that fail to reproduce survive beyond the breeding season. They continue to gain weight and to accumulate lipid and glycogen from August to September, but these energy reserves fall (to levels comparable to those of post-breeding fish) in December, when these fish probably die. These results demonstrate that in male sticklebacks, growth and gonad maturation can be sustained in parallel with the accumulation of energy reserves, which are subsequently extensively depleted as a result of reproductive activities. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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