The Effect of Habitat Exposure and Ontogeny on the Survival Skills of Hatchery Red Drum

2008 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 399-409
Author(s):  
Jessica L. Beck ◽  
Jay R. Rooker
Keyword(s):  
Red Drum ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 282 (1819) ◽  
pp. 20151414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee A. Fuiman ◽  
Kestrel O. Perez

Metabolic programming occurs when variations in nutrition during a specific developmental window result in long-term metabolic effects. It has been studied almost exclusively in humans and other mammals but never in an ecological context. Here, we report metabolic programming and its functional consequences in a marine fish, red drum. We demonstrate that maternal provisioning of eggs with an essential fatty acid, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), varies with DHA content of the maternal diet. When offspring are reared on a DHA-replete diet, whole-body DHA content of offspring depends upon the amount of DHA that was in the egg. We further demonstrate that whole-body DHA content is correlated with traits related to offspring fitness (escape responses, routine swimming, growth, and survival). DHA content of red drum eggs produced in nature is in the range where the effects of metabolic programming are most pronounced. Our findings indicate that during a brief developmental window, DHA plays a role in establishing the metabolic capacity for its own uptake or storage, with protracted and possibly permanent effects on ecologically important survival skills of individuals and important implications for dynamics of populations and food webs.


Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 767
Author(s):  
Signe Preuschoft ◽  
Ishak Yassir ◽  
Asti Iryanti Putri ◽  
Nur Aoliya ◽  
Erma Yuliani ◽  
...  

Orangutans depend on social learning for the acquisition of survival skills. The development of skills is not usually assessed in rescued orphans’ pre-release. We collected data of seven orphans over an 18-months-period to monitor the progress of ontogenetic changes. The orphans, 1.5–9 years old, were immersed in a natural forest environment with human surrogate mothers and other orphans. Social interactions deviated significantly from those of wild mother-reared immatures. Infants spent more time playing socially with peers, at the expense of resting and solitary play. Infants were also more often and at an earlier age distant from their human surrogate mothers than wild immatures are from their biological mothers. We found important changes towards an orangutan-typical lifestyle in 4- to 7-year-old orphans, corresponding to the weaning age in maternally reared immatures. The older orphans spent less time interacting with human surrogate mothers or peers, started to use the canopy more than lower forest strata and began to sleep in nests in the forest. Their time budgets resembled those of wild adults. In conclusion, juvenile orphans can develop capacities that qualify them as candidates for release back into natural habitat when protected from humanising influences and immersed in a species-typical environment.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodolfo Enrique Rio‐Rodriguez ◽  
Jose Gustavo Ramirez‐Paredes ◽  
Sonia Araceli Soto‐Rodriguez ◽  
Yechiam Shapira ◽  
Mariana del Jesus Huchin‐Cortes ◽  
...  

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