Feeding periodicity and the production of daily growth increments in otoliths of steelhead trout (Salmo gairdneri) and starry flounder (Platichthys stellatus)

1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (7) ◽  
pp. 1591-1597 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven E. Campana

Juvenile steelhead trout (Salmo gairdneri) and starry flounders (Platichthys stellatus) were reared 64–76 days under various experimental feeding regimes to determine if feeding periodicity influenced the production of daily growth increments on the otoliths. Both species produced daily increments when fed thrice daily, daily, or once every 3 days, as well as through 26–32 days of starvation. Daily growth increments were also deposited in vateritic ("crystalline") otoliths, which constituted 27% of the trout sagittae sampled. Feeding frequency affected increment appearance and the incidence of subdaily increments in trout, but not in flounders. The difference in effect was probably due to the higher metabolic rate of trout. Increment deposition in all flounders was far more variable than in trout, and some flounders apparently ceased increment formation altogether.

1982 ◽  
Vol 39 (7) ◽  
pp. 937-942 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven E. Campana ◽  
John D. Neilson

Tetracycline injected into juvenile starry flounders (Platichthys stellatus) was incorporated into the periphery of the sagittal otoliths within 24 h. The resulting band, visible under ultraviolet light, was used as a dated mark on the otolith growth increments. This technique was used to verify that increments were laid down on a daily basis, both in field and laboratory environments. Subdaily increments were visible in otoliths of fishes reared under most environmental conditions. The production of daily increments in juvenile starry flounders preconditioned to a natural environmental regime was unaffected by photoperiod or temperature fluctuation, suggesting the presence of an internal circadian rhythm.Key words: starry flounder, Platichthys stellatus; otoliths, daily rings, growth increments, circadian, tetracycline


1968 ◽  
Vol 42 (S2) ◽  
pp. 64-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giorgio Pannella ◽  
Copeland Macclintock

Tidal cycles are reflected in daily growth-increment sequences in shells of many Recent and fossil mollusks. Living specimens of the bivalve Mercenaria mercenaria were notched at the growing edge of the shell and planted intertidally in Barnstable Harbor, Massachusetts. Shells from two lots, killed at intervals of 368 and 723 days after planting, show the same number of small growth increments as there were days from notching to killing. Superimposed on daily growth record are effects of winter (thin daily increments) and tides (14-day cycles of thick and thin daily increments). Comparison of Barnstable tide record with the first year's growth shows that, for each 14-day cycle, thin daily increments form during neap tides and thicker daily increments form during spring tides. Although tidal patterns are present in subtidal Mercenaria shells, they are rarely as pronounced as in intertidal ones. Spawning patterns differ from winter patterns; they are expressed in the shell by an interruption of regular deposition followed by a series of thin daily increments. Continuous sequences of bidaily patterns, one thick daily increment followed by a relatively thin one, are common in M. mercenaria.The clearest 14-day cycles of deposition were seen in shells of the bivalve Tridacna squamosa. Each daily neap-tide increment is a simple layer consisting of a dark and light zone. Each daily spring-tide increment is a complex layer consisting of two light-dark alternations separated by a depositional break that is more pronounced than the breaks delimiting daily intervals. Preliminary results of growth-increment counts in fossils show a generally decreasing trend of the mean values of days per lunar month toward the Recent. The Pennsylvanian value is 30.07 ± 0.08, a figure that is in general agreement with those of Scrutton (1964), who counted 30.59 days per month on Devonian corals, and Barker (1966), who reported more than 30 days per month in Pennsylvanian bivalves.


1982 ◽  
Vol 39 (10) ◽  
pp. 1335-1339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth H. Wilson ◽  
P. A. Larkin

Sixty-four laboratory-reared sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) fry were marked to enable identification as individuals. Each was weighed initially on June 6 or 8, 1979; and again on July 6; and surviving fish were weighed a third time on July 20. After the final weighing, sagittae were removed and a standard otolith radius, corresponding to each weight, was determined by counting back from the otolith edge the appropriate number of daily increments. The regression of ln otolith radius on ln fish weight was linear, with r2 = 0.92, demonstrating a relationship between mean thickness of a daily increment in sagittae, and mean daily change in weight of the fry. Using this regression line, previous weights were back calculated from corresponding otolith radii with errors in the order of 15%.Key words: otoliths, daily growth increments, back calculation, sockeye salmon


2004 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 403 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mitsuo Sakai ◽  
Norma Brunetti ◽  
Marcela Ivanovic ◽  
Beatriz Elena ◽  
Kazuyoshi Nakamura

To identify sub-daily or aperiodic increments of statolith growth in the ommastrephid squid Illex argentinus, we examined statolith microstructure, especially with regard to the natal ring, where counting of daily growth increments should begin, and the widths of subsequent daily increments. Paralarvae obtained by artificial fertilisation were incubated on board at different temperatures ranging from 11.4 to 25.4°C, and were starved throughout the experiments. We observed statolith growth from newly hatched to 10-day-old paralarvae and used alizarine complexone staining to attempt validation of the growth. The maximum statolith radius (MSR) of newly hatched paralarvae was constant at 21.1 μm across the full range of temperatures, with the exception of 25.4°C. Daily growth of MSR was analysed separately in two phases, the pre-yolk-absorption phase (i.e. yolk sac still present) and the post-yolk-absorption phase. During the pre-yolk-absorption phase, the daily growth rate (DGR, y) of the MSR varied from 3 to 7 μm day–1 depending on rearing temperature (x) and was expressed as y = 0.37x – 1.77. We concluded that the natal ring forms at 21 μm MSR. The initial increment width obtained from the DGR of MSR seems applicable for distinguishing daily rings from sub-daily rings, although this application should be limited to hatchling paralarvae in the pre-yolk-absorption phase.


1996 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 337-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Neil ◽  
B. Ogle ◽  
K. Annèr

AbstractEffects of a two-diet system combined withad libitumlactation feeding of sows on food consumption, sow live weight (LW), backfat depth, condition scoring, rebreeding interval, symptoms of agalactia and culling were studied on 60 sows followed for four parities. Feeding regimes were: CR, conventional i.e. restricted during gestation and lactation; SA, a simplified diet offered at a restricted level during gestation and a conventional dietad libitumduring lactation; CA, conventional during gestation and the same dietad libitumduring lactation. During lactation CR sows consumed 5·9 kg food daily (71 MJ metabolizable energy (ME)), whereas SA and CA sows consumed on average 7·0 kg (85 MJ ME), the difference being larger in multiparous than in primiparous sows and larger in the first than in later weeks of lactation. From the second farrowing onward sows on CR treatment were lighter and had thinner backfat and lower condition scores than sows on CA treatment, with sows on SA treatment in between, i.e. approaching the CR sows in the gestation periods and the CA sows in the lactation periods. At first service LW was 130 kg and backfat thickness 14 mm. During the fourth lactation LW averaged 190 kg in CR sows and around 220 kg for SA and CA sows, and backfat thickness was 11 mm in CR sows and around 16 mm in SA and CA sows. SA sows tended to rebreed earlier after weaning than did CR or CA sows. CA sows and in particular SA sows had higher incidences of agalactia symptoms and higher rectal temperatures post partum than CR sows. The culling rates did not differ between feeding regimes, although the predominant causes for culling did, being shoulder lesions and abscesses in thin CR sows and leg disorders in SA and CA sows. At the end of the experiment, however, more SA sows than others were retained in the experimental herd. It was concluded that the SA feeding regime was superior in terms of sow performance, despite an increased incidence of agalactia symptoms.


1976 ◽  
Vol 54 (9) ◽  
pp. 1530-1534 ◽  
Author(s):  
John R. Smith ◽  
Lavern J. Weber

Elevation in pineal hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT; EC 2.1.1.4) activity in juvenile steelhead trout was associated with the dark portions of three different photoperiods with a sharp increase in pineal HIOMT activity occurring in the first 4 h of darkness. This pattern of activity could be abolished by bilateral enucleation but not by surgical capping of the pineal region. Surgical exposure of the pineal region in blinded fish did not restore HIOMT responses to changes in lighting.


1986 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 304-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
James M. Haynes ◽  
David C. Nettles ◽  
Kevin M. Parnell ◽  
Michael P. Voiland ◽  
Robert A. Olson ◽  
...  

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