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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37652290

RESUMO

In iteroparous female salmonids, the growth and reproductive endocrine axes interact during the period after spawning. Energy depletion due to pre-spawn fasting, migration, and ovarian development must be restored, and the next reproductive cycle is initiated in consecutively maturing fish. In the natural environment, food availability is often limited during the post-spawn period. To investigate the growth and reproductive endocrinology of the post-spawn period, we sampled female rainbow trout over the 30 weeks following their first spawning. Fish were fasted for 2 months prior to spawning, then fed a standard or a restricted ration. Analysis was confined to reproductive fish. Plasma estradiol-17ß decreased during the 8 weeks following spawning and then began increasing in both ration groups and was lower in feed-restricted versus standard ration fish from 8 weeks onward. Plasma insulin-like growth factor-1 increased over the same period and then remained constant in both ration groups and was lower in feed-restricted versus standard ration fish from week 8 to week 30. Plasma growth hormone decreased following spawning in standard ration fish and became elevated in feed-restricted versus standard ration fish at 20- and 30-weeks post-spawn. Growth rates, condition factor, and muscle lipid levels were higher in standard ration versus feed-restricted fish within 2-4 weeks after spawning. These results suggest that two phases occurred during the post-spawn period: recovery from spawning and restoration of energy reserves over weeks 0 to 8, followed by adjustment of the growth and reproductive endocrine axes to ration level over weeks 8 to 30.


Assuntos
Hormônio do Crescimento , Oncorhynchus mykiss , Feminino , Animais , Fator de Crescimento Insulin-Like I , Meio Ambiente , Jejum
2.
Gen Comp Endocrinol ; 332: 114181, 2023 02 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36455641

RESUMO

Consecutive and skip repeat spawning (1- or ≥2-year spawning interval) life histories commonly occur in seasonally breeding iteroparous fishes. Spawning interval variation is driven by energetic status and impacts fisheries management. In salmonids, energetic status (either absolute level of energy reserves or the rate of change of energy reserves, i.e., energy balance) is thought to determine reproductive trajectory during a critical period ∼1 year prior to initial spawning. However, information on repeat spawners is lacking. To examine the timing and the aspects of energetic status that regulate repeat spawning interval, female steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) were fasted for 10 weeks after spawning and then fed ad libitum and compared to ad libitum fed controls. Plasma growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) levels were measured to assess long-term energy balance. Plasma estradiol levels showed that some fish in both groups initiated a consecutive spawning cycle. In fasted fish, GH was lower at spawning in consecutive versus skip spawners. In consecutive spawners, GH was higher at spawning in fed versus fasted fish. These results suggest that fish with a less negative energy balance at spawning initiated reproductive development in the absence of feeding, but that feeding during the post-spawning period enabled initiation of reproduction in some fish with a more negative energy balance at spawning. Thus, both energy balance at spawning and feeding after spawning regulated reproductive schedules. These results show that the critical period model of salmonid maturation applies to regulation of repeat spawning, and that the reproductive decision window extends into the first 10 weeks after spawning.


Assuntos
Oncorhynchus mykiss , Animais , Feminino , Hormônio do Crescimento
3.
Conserv Physiol ; 7(1): coz038, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31380109

RESUMO

Many iteroparous fishes spawn after skipping one or more yearly cycles, which impacts recruitment estimates used for fisheries management and conservation. The physiological mechanisms underlying the development of consecutive and skip spawning life histories in fishes are not well understood. In salmonids, lipid energy reserves and/or growth are thought to regulate the initiation of reproductive maturation during a critical period ~1 year prior to spawning. The fasting spawning migration of summer-run steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) results in significant depletion of energy reserves during the proposed critical period for repeat spawning. To determine whether and when lipid energy reserves and growth influence repeat spawning, measures of lipid energy reserves, growth rate and reproductive development were tracked in female steelhead trout from first to second spawning as a consecutive or skip spawner in captivity. Plasma triglyceride (TG) levels and growth rate were elevated by 10 weeks after spawning in reproductive (i.e. consecutive spawning) versus non-reproductive (i.e. skip spawning) individuals. Muscle lipid (ML) levels, condition factor and plasma estradiol levels increased at later time points. The early differences in plasma TG levels and increases in growth rate are attributable to differential rates of feeding and assimilation between the groups following spawning. A year after spawning, plasma TG levels, MLs and growth rate decreased in consecutive spawners, attributable to transfer of lipid reserves into the ovary. During the year prior to second spawning, energy reserves and plasma estradiol levels were higher in reproductive skip spawners versus consecutive spawners, reflecting the energy deficit after first spawning. These results suggest that the decision to initiate ovarian recrudescence occurs by 10 weeks after first spawning and are consistent with the differences in energy reserves acquired following spawning being a consequence of that decision. This information will increase the success of conservation projects reconditioning post-spawning summer-run steelhead trout.

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