Effects of temperature and photoperiod on the plasma freezing point depression, Cl− concentration, and protein "antifreeze" in winter flounder
The influence of water temperature and photoperiod on the timing of the annual cycle of plasma "antifreeze" and Cl− levels was examined in winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes americanus).The normal winter appearance of plasma "antifreeze" was delayed by day lengths longer than 12 h. Day length had no effect on the timing of "antifreeze" disappearance in spring.The time of "antifreeze" appearance was delayed by low water temperatures and unaffected by warm water.The rate of "antifreeze" disappearance in the spring was temperature dependent. Flounder continuously exposed to elevated water temperatures during the winter lost the "antifreeze" several months prior to controls.Plasma Cl− concentrations increased with declining seawater temperatures. Long day lengths delayed the time at which this increase normally appeared. A small winter increase in plasma Cl− occurred even when the flounder were exposed to constant conditions of warm water.The results suggest that the annual "antifreeze" cycle may be endogenous with photoperiod being the zeitgeber for entraining the precise time of initiation of "antifreeze" synthesis in the early winter.Several aspects of the plasma Cl− annual cycle may also be under endogenous control.