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cje ›› 2012, Vol. 31 ›› Issue (10): 2606-2612.

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Swimming performance and energy metabolism of male and female crucian carps (Carassius auratus) during their Ⅲ reproduction phase.

YANG Han, CAO Zhen-dong**, FU Shi-jian   

  1. (Laboratory of Evolutionary Physiology and Behavior, Chongqing Key Laboratory of Animal Biology, Chongqing Normal University, Chongqing 401331, China)
  • Online:2012-10-10 Published:2012-10-10

Abstract: To examine whether the swimming performance and metabolic traits of 1-year-old male and female crucian carps (Carassius auratus) during their Ⅲ reproduction phase have differences, the fast-start movement, critical swimming speed (Ucrit), rest metabolic rate (MO2rest), active metabolic rate (MO2active), and metabolic rate (MO2) during different swimming speeds were measured at water temperature 20±1 ℃. The Ucrit of female and male crucian carps was 6.97±0.22 and 7.29±0.31 BL·s-1, and the maximum linear velocity during fast-start movement (Vmax) was 20.48±0.69 and 20.40±1.09 BL·s-1, respectively, with no significant differences. The Ucrit, Vmax, maximum linear acceleration during fast-start movement (amax), reaction time, migration distance during the first 120 ms of faststart movement, and MO2rest of female and male crucian carps also had no significant differences. However, the MO2active and metabolic scope of female crucian carps were significantly higher than those of the males (341.92±22.59 vs. 307.50±22.66 mg O2·kg-1·h-1 and 257.18±18.51 vs. 220.20±18.95 mg O2·kg-1·h-1, respectively). It was suggested that the male and female crucian carps during their Ⅲ reproduction phase had no significant difference in the swimming capacity, but the females adopted metabolic up-regulation strategy as a compensation for their increased energy burden due to reproduction status.

Key words: Daycent model, soil organic carbon, management practice, carbon sequestration, soil organic carbon change.