A comparison of the effect of long-term starvation on responses to low-temperature stress by juvenile rainbow (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and brown (Salmo trutta) trout reveal different responses in the two species


BAYIR M., BAYIR A., Aras N. M.

MARINE AND FRESHWATER BEHAVIOUR AND PHYSIOLOGY, cilt.47, sa.4, ss.239-251, 2014 (SCI-Expanded) identifier identifier

Özet

Biometric parameters and oxidative stress indicators were measured in liver and muscle samples from rainbow trout and brown trout juveniles exposed to a 45-day starvation period at low water temperature. As a general tendency, hepatic antioxidant enzyme activities in both species increased with fasting to eliminate the harmful effects of reactive oxygen species (ROS). However, the metabolic response to food deprivation in the muscle of each species was different. Lipid peroxidation levels in both species increased with starvation. We concluded that (1) low water temperature enhances ROS production in salmonids because of increased polyunsaturated fatty acid content in the cell membrane; (2) starvation significantly impaired the growth parameters of brown trout, yet the reverse was found for rainbow trout; and (3) despite this negative interaction, brown trout juveniles can physiologically tolerate oxidative stress caused by starvation and can therefore be cultivated under stressful conditions even in their early life stages.