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Effect of starvation on swimming performance of juvenile crucian carp.

PENGHAN Liu-yi, 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:2014-10-10 Published:2014-10-10

Abstract: To investigate the effect of starvation on swimming performance of juvenile crucian carp (Carassius carassius), three different measures of swimming performance (critical swimming speed, Ucrit; constant acceleration speed, Ucat; maximum speed in faststart, Ufast) were measured after different periods of starvation (1, 14 and 28 days) at 20 ℃. The Ucat was 131%-152% that of Ucrit whereas Ufast was 368%-509% that of Ucrit with starvation. Starvation showed no significant effect on Ufast whereas significant decreases of 14%-32% in Ucat and of 24%-29% in Ucrit were observed after 14 and 28 days of starvation. The difference between Ufast and Ucrit(or Ucat) was aggravated after starvation. The difference between Ucrit and Ucat was also aggravated after shortterm starvation (14 days) since Ucrit was more sensitive to starvation than Ucrat. Starvation showed no significant difference in active oxygen consumption rate (MO2active), indicating oxygen  uptake capacity was not the reason for decrease in Ucrit after starvation. Furthermore, starved crucain carp showed higher MO2 at any given swimming speed and more profound MO2 increase with the increase of swimming speed compared to fish in control group, indicating that the decrease of Ucrit under starvation was mainly due to lower swimming efficiency and shortage of substrates.

Key words: stable isotope, food web structure, wetland ecosystem, trophic relationship, food source