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1.
Energy budget is one of the most studied parameters in aquatic animals under environmental challenge. To examine how prolonged starvation would affect their energy budget, respiration rate (RR), ammonia excretion rate (ER), oxygen consumption to ammonia–nitrogen excretion (O:N) ratio and scope for growth (SfG) representing the balance between energy intake and metabolic output, two Asian horseshoe crab species, Tachypleus tridentatus and Carcinoscorpius rotundicauda, were investigated in two feeding regimes (fed and starved) over a period of 7 weeks. No significant effects of species and time course, as well as their interaction, on absorption efficiency were observed in the fed treatments. For both species, RR and ER of the starved treatments significantly decreased, while their O:N ratio significantly increased during the experiment. However, such values for the fed treatments remained relatively stable over the study period. A rapid reduction in SfG was only apparent in the first week of the starved treatments for both species; thereafter, their SfG remained relatively constant. In the fed treatments, SfG of T. tridentatus was significantly lower than that of C. rotundicauda throughout the experiment. In general, C. rotundicauda showed a greater decrease in SfG under starvation than T. tridentatus, suggesting that they may have a more competitive life-history strategy for adjusting to poor nutritional conditions.  相似文献   

2.
The nature of protein catabolism in a wide range of species of midwater zooplankton was investigated. The weight-specific ammonia excretion rates (g NH3–N g–1 dry wt h–1, y) decline exponentially with minimum depth of occurreece (MDO, x), y=163.4 x–0.479±0.212 (95%ci) (CI=confidence interval), when temperature is held constant. The change in ammonia excretion can be partially explained by the decrease in percent protein (%P) with MDO, %P=80.17 MDO–0.148±0.122 (95%ci) The atomic O:N ratio of freshly caught zooplankters ranged from 9.1 to 91, with most measurements between 9 and 25. Detailed studies were carried out on the response of one of the species studied (Gnathophausia ingens) to starvation (28 d). After 14 d of starvation the average ammonia excretion rate declined by more than 75% to less than 1 g NH3–N g–1 wet wt h–1, although the average oxygen consumption declined by only 13% within the first 7 d of starvation and then remained stable. This differential response of oxygen consumption and ammonia excretion to starvation resulted in an increase in the average O:N ratio of starved animals from an initial 33 to 165 after 21 d. The average O:N ratios of fed mysids remained below 38 during the experiment. G. ingens maintains a relatively uniform metabolic rate during starvation by relying more heavily on its large lipid stores than when being fed.  相似文献   

3.
Changes in the respiration, ammonia excretion and biochemical composition were studied for three species of starving zooplankton (Calanus finmarchicus, Sagitta elegans, and Acartia clausi). Over the period of starvation, the respiration rate of all three species followed the same pattern of an initial decrease followed by a more or less constant level. A similar pattern was observed for the ammonia excretion rate of S. elegans and A. clausi, whereas C. finmarchicus excretion appeared to oscillate between high and low levels of protein catabolism. Study of the biochemical changes showed that C. finmarchicus consumed primarily lipids, and at times proteins, to meet its energy requirement whereas S. elegans and A. clausi primarily used protein. Variations in the elemental composition as well as the O:N ratio confirmed that C. finmarchicus alternated between periods of protein-dominant catabolism and lipid-dominant catabolism during starvation. No similar change in catabolism was observed in the two other species. The results are discussed in terms of physiological mechanisms of resistance to starvation and were used to calculate the energy budget of S. elegans and C. finmarchicus during the period of total starvation. The significance of such budgets is discussed and some of the sources of error examined.Bedford Institute of Oceanography Contribution.  相似文献   

4.
The metabolic rates (oxygen uptake, ammonia excretion, phosphate excretion) of epipelagic marine zooplankton have been expressed as a function of body mass (dry, carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus weights) and habitat temperature, using the multiple-regression method. Zooplankton data used for this analysis are from phylogenetically mixed groups (56 to 143 species, representing 7 to 8 phyla, body mass range: 6 orders of magnitude) from various latitudes (habitat temperature range:-1.4° to 30°C). The results revealed that 84 to 96% of variation in metabolic rates is due to body mass and habitat temperature. Among the various body-mass units, the best correlation was provided by carbon and nitrogen units for all three metabolic rates. Oxygen uptake, ammonia excretion and phosphate excretion are all similar in terms of body-mass effect, but differ in terms of temperature effect. With carbon or nitrogen body-mass units, calculated Q10 values are 1.82 to 1.89 for oxygen uptake, 1.91 to 1.93 for ammonia excretion and 1.55 for phosphate excretion. The effects of body mass and habitat temperature on the metabolic quotients (O:N, N:P, O:P) are insignificant. The present results for oxygen-uptake rate vs body mass do not differ significantly from those reported for general poikilotherms by Hemmingsen and for crustaceans by Ivleva at a comparable temperature (20°C). The importance of a body-mass measure for meaningful comparison is suggested by the evaluation of the habitat-temperature effect between mixed taxonomic groups and selected ones. Considering the dominant effects of body mass and temperature on zooplankton metabolic rates, the latitudinal gradient of community metabolic rate for net zooplankton in the ocean is estimated, emphasizing the non-parallelism between community metabolic rates and the standing stock of net zooplankton.  相似文献   

5.
T. Ikeda  B. Bruce 《Marine Biology》1986,92(4):545-555
Oxygen uptake and ammonia excretion rates, and body carbon and nitrogen contents were measured in krill (Euphausia superba) and eight other zooplankton species collected during November–December 1982 in the Prydz Bay, Antarctica. From these data, metabolic O:N ratios (by atoms), body C:N ratios (by weight) and daily metabolic losses of body carbon and nitrogen were calculated as a basis from which to evaluate seasonal differences in metabolism and nutritional condition. Comparison of the present data with mid-summer (January) data revealed that early-summer E. superba were characterized by higher metabolic O:N ratios (58.7 to 103, compared with 15.9 to 17.5 for mid-summer individuals). Higher O:N ratios of early-summer E. superba resulted largely from reduced ammonia excretion rates and, to a lesser degree, from slightly increased oxygen uptake rates. Body C:N ratios of E. superba were low in early-summer (3.8 to 4.2) compared with mid-summer krill (4.1 to 4.7) due to lowered body-carbon contents in the former (42.6 to 43.6% compared with 43.2 to 47.5% dry weight of midsummer individuals); gravid females formed an exception, since no seasonal differences in body elemental composition were detected for these. No significant changes in water content (75.3 to 81.4% wet wt) and nitrogen content (9.9 to 11.1% dry wt) in E. superba were evident between the two seasons. Seasonal differences in metabolic rates and elemental composition were less pronounced in a salp (Salpa thompsoni), but a higher metabolic O:N ratio occurred in early-summer individuals. Interspecific comparison of the seven remaining zooplankton species studied with twelve species from mid-summer zooplankton investigated in an earlier study indicated that higher metabolic O:N ratios in early-summer are characteristic not only of herbivore/filter-feeders, but also of some carnivores/omnivores. No relationship between metabolic O:N ratios and body C:N ratios was apparent either intraspecifically or interspecifically, within or between early-summer and mid-summer seasons.  相似文献   

6.
Oxygen uptake, ammonia excretion and phosphate excretion were measured in 14 Antarctic zooplankton species, including various size classes of krill (Euphausia superba), during a cruise to the Antarctic Ocean adjacent to Wilkes Land in the summer of 1980. Elemental composition (C, N and P) was also determined on the specimens used in these metabolic rate measurements. The values obtained for C, N and P were 4.7 to 47.5%, 1.2 to 12.5% and 0.09 to 1.23% of dry weight, respectively. Regression analyses of metabolic rates on different measures of body weight (fresh, dry, C, N and P) were made on krill, salps and other zooplankton as arbitrarily defined groups and also on the combined groups to determine the best measure of body weight for intra- and interspecific comparison of metabolic rates. The correlations were highly significant in all regressions, although no common measure of body weight provided the best correlation for the three groups of animals. Except for the regression of ammonia excretion on C and N weight, all other regressions of metabolic rates and body weights were significantly different within these three groups. In the combined group, oxygen uptake and ammonia excretion were better correlated to C and N weights than to dry and P weights. For phosphate excretion in the combined groups, dry weight gave the best correlation. Despite these results, the choice of a particular measure of body weight was shown to be important in a comparison of the rates between krill and salps because of their widely different chemical compositions. Our results of rate measurements are compared with those of previous workers for some Antarctic zooplankton, particularly krill. Some of the previous data are in good agreement with ours, while others are not. Possible contributing factors are considered in the latter case. The ratios between the rates (O:N, N:P and O:P) fell within the general ranges reported for zooplankton from different seas. The O:N ratio was consistently low (7.0 to 19.8, by atoms) in all species, suggesting the importance of protein in their metabolic substrates. Protein-oriented metabolism was also supported by the results of C and N analyses which indicated no large deposition of lipid in these animals. From the results of metabolic rate measurements and elemental analyses, daily losses in bodily C, N and P for Antarctic zooplankton in summer were estimated as 0.4 to 2.8%, 0.6 to 2.5% and 1.3 to 19.4%, respectively. These values are approximately one order of magnitude lower than those reported for subtropical and tropical zooplankton.  相似文献   

7.
Tsutomu Ikeda 《Marine Biology》2013,160(2):251-262
Respiration and ammonia excretion rates of 19–24 euphausiids from the epipelagic through bathypelagic zones of the world’s oceans were compiled. Body mass (expressed in terms of dry mass, carbon or nitrogen), habitat temperature and sampling depth were designated as parameters in multiple regression analysis. Results suggested that the three parameters were highly significant, contributing 71–89 % of the variance in respiration rates and 69–81 % of the variance in ammonia excretion rates. Atomic O:N ratios derived from simultaneous measurements of respiration and ammonia excretion rates ranged from 11 to 90 (median: 27), and no appreciable effects of the three parameters on O:N ratios were detected. If global-bathymetric models for the metabolism and chemical composition of copepods and chaetognaths are compared with those of euphausiids, it becomes evident that euphausiids are unique in that they maintain high metabolic rates and accumulate moderate amounts of energy reserves (lipids).  相似文献   

8.
Colonies of the temperate coral Astrangia danae occur naturally with and without zooxanthellae. Basal nitrogen excretion rates of nonsymbiotic colonies increased with increasing feeding frequency [average excretion rate was 635 ng-at N (mg-at tissue-N)-1 h-1]. Reduced excretion rates of symbiotic colonies were attributed to N uptake by the zooxanthellae. Nitrogen uptake rates of the zooxanthellae averaged 8 ng-at N (106 cells)-1 h-1 in the dark and 21 ng-at N (106 cells)-1 h-1 at 200 Ein m-2 s-1. At these rates the zooxanthellae could provide 54% of the daily basal N requirement of the coral if all of the recycled N was translocated. Basal respiration rates were 172 nmol O2 cm-2 h-1 for starved colonies and 447 nmol O2 cm-2 h-1 for colonies fed three times per week. There were no significant differences between respiration rates of symbiotic and nonsymbiotic colonies. N excretion and respiration rates of fed (symbiotic and nonsymbiotic) colonies increased greatly soon after feeding. N absorption efficiencies decreased with increasing feeding frequency. A N mass balance, constructed for hypothetical situations of nonsymbiotic and symbiotic (3×106 zooxanthellae cm-2) colonies, starved and fed 15 g-at N cm-2wk-1, showed that the presence of symbionts could double the N growth rate of feeding colonies, and reduce the turnover-time of starved ones, but could not provide all of the N requirements of starved colonies. Rates of secondary production, estimated from rates of photosynthesis and respiration were similar to those estimated for reef corals.  相似文献   

9.
Ammonia excretion of individual Crangon franciscorum Stimpson was monitored in response to ingestion of single meals. The three experimental diets were tubificids, mysids and fish. Ammonia excretion was also monitored for individual shrimp which had been starved. The rate of ammonia excretion was higher for fed than for starved individuals in all cases. Ammonia excretion rates were higher for shrimp which were fed tubificids than those fed the other diets. The rate of excretion was influenced by both weight of the individual and the amount ingested of each diet. Ammonia excretion was influenced by dietary factors other than nitrogen content of the diet or the quantity ingested. The data suggest that field estimates of ammonia excretion based on the excretion rates of starved animals may be underestimates. The recent feeding history of an organism influences the rate of ammonia excretion as well as the relationship between the rate of excretion and weight.  相似文献   

10.
An investigation was made into the possible causes for the decline of physiological activities in Acetes sibogae australis Colefax and Acartia australis Farran during their maintenance for a period of 2 d following capture. Physiological activities comprising respiration, electron transport system (ETS) activity and excretion of ammonia and phosphate, and the biochemical components protein, RNA, ATP and adenylate energy charge (EC) were measured. Excluding fluctuation in the ammonia excretion rate, physiological rates and biochemical components decreased on an individual basis with time after capture for both species for this period. These decreases were generally moderated if expressed on a protein basis. Notwithstanding these changes, the adenylate EC of both species was constant at the normal level. From the results of stable EC and other physiological and biochemical consequences, it was concluded that food shortage rather than capture stress was the major factor contributing to decreases in the various physiological and biochemical properties of the two zooplankton species studied.  相似文献   

11.
Rates of oxygen consumption, ammonia excretion and phosphate excretion were measured on a hydromedusae (Aglantha digitale), pteropods (Limacia helicina, Clione limacina), copepods (Calanus finmarchicus, C. glacialis, C. hyperboreus, Metridia longa), an amphipod (Parathemisto libellula), a euphausiid (Thysanoessa inermis) and a chaetognath (Sagitta elegans), all of which were dominant species in the Barents Sea during early summer 1987. Water and ash contents and elemental composition (C and N) were also analysed on the specimens used in these metabolic experiments. Between species variations were 67.8% to 94.7% of wet weight in water content, 6.4% to 56.5% of dry weight in ash content, 16.7% to 61.0% of dry weight in carbon content, and 4.3% to 11.2% of dry weight in nitrogen content. Oxygen consumption rates ranged from 0.33 to 13.8 l O2 individual-1 h-1, ammonia excretion rates, from 0.0072 to 0.885 gN individual-1 h-1 and phosphate excretion rates, from 0.0036 to 0.33 g P individual-1 h-1. In general, higher rates were associated with larger species, but considerable differences were also seen between species. The ratios between the rates (O : N, N : P, O : P) exhibited a wide species-specific variation, indicating differences in dominant metabolic substrates. Typical protein oriented metabolism was identified only in S. elegans. From the results of metabolic rate measurements and elemental analyses, daily losses of body carbon and nitrogen were estimated to be 0.50 to 4.15% and 0.084 to 1.87%, respectively, showing faster turnover rates of carbon than that of nitrogen. Comparison of daily loss of body carbon of the Barents Sea zooplankton with that of the Antarctic zooplankton indicated reduced rates of the former (63% on average).  相似文献   

12.
Measurements of respiration and excretion at 25°C were made for five species of ctenophores collected during five cruises to the Bahamas (1982–1984). The mean element-specific respiration and ammonium excretion rates of freshly collected specimens of all species ranged from 4 to 16% d-1, the mean atomic O:N ratios were 10 to 16, and ammonium averaged 60 to 90% of the total dissolved nitrogen excreted. For adult ctenophores, the carbon content ranged from 0.6% carbon (as percent of dry weight) for Bolinopsis vitrea to 3.7% carbon for Beroë ovata. There was a marked increase in the organic content (% carbon of dry weight) of small Bolinopsis vitrea with tentacles compared to fully lobate adults. B. vitrea had increasingly higher metabolic rates when held at food concentrations up to 100 copepods 1-1 (about 250 g C 1-1). The overall range between starved and well-fed B. vitrea was about two times for respiration and a factor of three for ammonium excretion. B. vitrea decreased from well-fed to a starved metabolic rate in about a day after removal from food. The metabolic rate of Eurhamphaea vexilligera was not measurably affected by short-term starvation or feeding (maximum 25 copepods 1-1). In feeding experiments, E. vexilligera of 20 to 56 mm length fed at rates equivalent to clearance rates of 250 to 1 800 ml h-1.  相似文献   

13.
The relationship between the rates of oxygen consumption, ammonia and phosphate excretion of a pelagic tunicate, the larvacean Oikopleura dioica Fol, 1872 were assessed as a function of size, dry weight and ash-free dry weight at 15°, 20° and 24°C. O. dioica has higher respiration and excretion rates than copepods of similar weight, but the weight exponent of the allometric power function: Y=aX b is similar to that of other poikilotherms. Temperatures above 20°C have a depressing effect on respiration and ammonia excretion. 90% of the variance in metabolic rates is explainable by body mass and temperatures Q10 values for oxygen consumption, ammonia and phosphate excretion, respectively, are 2.45, 1.86 and 1.75 between 15° and 20°C, and 3.75, 2.90 and 3.60 between 20° and 24°C. Metabolic quotients (O:N, O:P, N:P) indicate a protein-oriented diet. The results of this study suggest weak metabolic regulation in O. dioica, an energetic strategy which allows an immediate response to favourable changes in feeding conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Nitrogen excretion and assimilation efficiencies of individual Lithognathus lithognathus (Cuvier 1830), a marine teleost from high energy surf zones in Algoa Bay, South Africa, were determined under laboratory conditions in 1985. Nonfaecal-nitrogen excreted by starved and fed L. lithognathus consists mainly of ammonia with urea and amino acids as secondary excretory products. Ammonia excretion rates were temperature dependant with the excretion rate of starved fish significantly lower than those of fed fish, at all three experimental temperatures. The mass component b of the mass/ammonia excretion equation was temperature independent and ranged from 0.651 to 0.700 and 0.589 to 0.635 for starved and fed fish respectively. The mean percentage of food energy lost via dissolved nonfaecal excretory products (exogenous plus endogenous) was 6.11±6.07%. Assimilation efficiencies ranged from 70.75 to 99.29% for dry matter and from 95.72 to 99.58% on an energy basis. The combined nonfaecal and faecal energy loss was calculated at 11.87% of the ingested energy. The benthic feeding ichthyofauna recycle 255 g total nitrogen per metre strip per year which constitutes 2% of total phytoplankton nitrogen requirements of the surf zone.  相似文献   

15.
Respiration and nitrogen-excretion studies were carried out on several species of zooplankton (Meganyctiphanes norvegica, Phronima sedentaria, Acartia clausi and Sagitta setosa) under starvation. Although all the species were mainly ammonotelic, apparently a significant amount of organic nitrogen was excreted; the validity of the measurements and their significance are discussed. The effect of duration of starvation showed for M. norvegica and A. clausi two different patterns of behaviour, which were chiefly a function of the rate of biomass turnover of the species studied. The rates of metabolism, chemical composition, and reaction to starvation varied with season in M. norvegica. The physiological balance of the experimental animals was examined by calculating the protein carbon equivalent to respiratory and excretory catabolism, and by use of atomic O:N ratios. Starved individuals catabolized more protein carbon than can be accounted for by the amount of respiratory oxygen utilized. A hypothesis, which suggests that there are three levels of resistance to starvation, is proposed to explain this paradox, and its metabolic basis is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
A complete energy balance equation was estimated for the common octopus Octopus vulgaris at a constant temperature of 20°C, fed ad libitum on anchovy fillet (Engraulis encrasicolus). Energy used for growth and respiration or lost with faeces and excreted ammonia was estimated, along with total energy consumption through food, for six specimens of O. vulgaris (with masses between 114 and 662 g). The energy balance equation was estimated for the specimens at 10-day intervals. During each 10-day interval, food consumed, body mass increase and quantity of faeces voided were measured. The calorific values of octopus flesh, anchovy flesh and faeces were measured by bomb calorimetry. Oxygen consumption and ammonia excretion rates were monitored for each specimen during three 24-h experiments and daily oxygen consumption and ammonia excretion were estimated. It was found that 58% of the energy consumed was used for respiration. The amount of energy invested in somatic and gonadal growth represented 26% of the total energy budget. The energy discarded through faeces was 13% of consumed energy. The estimated assimilation efficiency (AE) values of O. vulgaris feeding on anchovy (80.9–90.7%) were lower than the AE values estimated for other cephalopod species with different diets of lower lipid content such as crabs or mussels. Specific growth rates (SGR) ranged 0.43–0.95 and were similar to those reported for other high-lipid diets (bogue, sardine) and lower than SGR values found for low-lipid, high-protein diets (squid, crab, natural diet). Ammonia excretion peak (6 h after feeding) followed the one of oxygen consumption (1 h after feeding). The values of atomic oxygen-to-nitrogen (O:N) ratio indicated a protein-dominated metabolism for O. vulgaris.  相似文献   

17.
Ammonium cycling by Antarctic zooplankton in winter   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Elemental composition and excretion rates of ammonium-nitrogen of zooplankton, ranging over more than five orders of magnitude in body size, were measured in mid-winter in coastal waters west of the Antarctic Peninsula. Excretion rates were constant for the initial 12 h of incubation in the four species tested, and experimental stocking densities of up to 126 mg dry wt l-1 did not cause variability in the rate of ammonium production. Weight-specific excretion rates of freshly caught Euchaeta antarctica, Conchoecia sp., Thysanoessa macrura, Euphausia superba, and early stage copepodites of Metridia gerlachei were not significantly different from those reported in summer. However, adult copepods of M. gerlachei and Calanoides acutus appear to have reduced their nitrogen metabolism during winter. Turnover rates of body nitrogen increased with diminishing size, ranging from <0.5% body N d-1 for large E. superba to >7% body N d-1 for CII and CIII copepodites of M. gerlachei. Only the nitrogen turnover rates of C. acutus were sufficiently low as to suggest that it could survive the entire austral winter without feeding. Phytoplankton and bacterioplankton were virtually absent in both the water column and the sea-ice. We conclude that carnivory is the dominant trophic mode of the pelagic zooplankton community in Antarctica during winter. Production of ammonium-nitrogen by the zooplankton community probably accounts for M10% of the total ammonium regenerated prior to the annual spring bloom.  相似文献   

18.
Excretion of ammonia by mesozooplankton (>200 m zooplankton) and its potential contribution to the nitrogen requirement for phytoplankton growth has been estimated for different hydrographical situations along a transect across the Catalan Sea (Northwestern Mediterranean). The nitrogen excreted as ammonia was estimated from mesozooplankton biomass and specific excretion rates. Nitrogen requirements of phytoplankton were estimated by means of carbon fixation rates and C:N ratios of <200 m particulate organic matter. Minimum C:N ratios and maximum primary production, zooplankton biomass, phytoplankton nitrogen requirements, and nitrogen excretion of zooplankton occurred near the Catalan density front. On average, the nitrogen regenerated by the mesozooplankton accounted for 43% of the nitrogen requirements of the phytoplankton. The specific excretion rates of ammonia and the percentage of phytoplanktonnitrogen requirements supplied by excreted nitrogen were higher at coastal stations. In some coastal and frontal stations, the ammonia excreted exceeded the phytoplanktonnitrogen demand. Bacteria competing for nutrient supply and the possible uncoupling between rate processes and standing stocks of phyto- and zooplankton could explain the apparent excess of regenerated ammonia.  相似文献   

19.
Eggs and larvae of the winter flounder Pseudopleuronectes americanus Walbaum were hatched and raised in the laboratory under controlled conditions. Biochemical composition was measured during development and found to be similar to that of other species: 65 to 80 percent protein, 15 to 30 percent fat, and 0 to 5 percent carbohydrate. Ash content was 7 to 10 percent of dry weight. The chorion comprised more than half of the weight of an egg and the data suggested that it was possibly a source of nutrition to the developing embryo. The sequence of utilization appeared to be carbohydrate and then protein to hatching, lipid, mixed lipid and protein, the predominantly protein until feeding began. Carbohydrate was accumulated at first feeding and depleted when growth began. Protein and lipid were deposited in approximately constant proportions. Respiration rates of eggs were low, 0.002–0.015 l O2 egg-1 h-1, but rose gradually from fertilization to hatching. Respiration rates of early larvae were from two to eight times that of eggs (0.033–0.131 l O2 larva-1 h-1). Variation in larval respiration rates indicated a three-fold difference in rate according to level of activity. Eggs excreted ammonia at an increasing rate from fertilization to hatching. Larvae excreted ammonia, primary amines, and other unidentified organic nitrogenous substances. Rates of excretion and proportions of excretory products varied with stage of development. Primary amine excretion was variable and a major component in early stages. Ammonia-N excreted was two to 20 times primary amine N excreted. Unidentified substances were the predominant form of N excretion during early feeding. Ammonia accounted for most of the N excreted in older larvae. Early specific growth rates were 2.1 and 5.5%. Net caloric conversion and net and gross nitrogen efficiencies were low in first feeding larvae compared to adult fishes (32.2, 27.7, and 10.7% respectively).Contribution no. 5071 from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution  相似文献   

20.
The large bathypelagic mysid Gnathophausia ingens was collected in January 1980 at 400 to 700 m depth from the San Clemente Basin off southern California. Instars 7-8 and Instars 10-12 were starved in the laboratory for up to 19 wk. Oxygen consumption and ammonia excretion rates, and water, protein, lipid, and ash contents were determined periodically during starvation. Protein and lipid were metabolized in approximately equal amounts by starved individuals after the initial weeks of food deprivation. Unidentified components (probably non-protein nitrogenous compounds) apparently were oxidized within the first 7 wk of starvation. Oxygen consumption and ammonia excretion by Instars 7-8 decreased steadily during 19 wk of starvation. In contrast, stable or increasing respiration and excretion rates were observed for fed mysids. The mean respiration rate of Instars 10-12 did not change significantly during 13 wk of starvation, although ammonia excretion rates decreased. Low metabolic rates and large lipid reserves probably help G. ingens to withstand long periods of starvation in the mesopelagic environment. Calculations based on the laboratory data demonstrate that small, infrequent meals could account for the rates of metabolism and growth observed for G. ingens in the field.  相似文献   

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