Abstract Given the predicted effects of climate change on seawater temperatures and water oxygen levels (i.e., the frequency and severity of hypoxia), it is important to understand the impact of these two environmental challenges on salmon used in the Atlantic Canada aquaculture industry (i.e., of Saint John River origin). Thus, we exposed salmon to: 1) control conditions (12 °C, 100% air sat.); 2) an incremental temperature increase (1 °C per week from 12 °C to 20 °C) and then held the fish at 20 °C for an additional 3 weeks (Experiment #1); and 3) an incremental increase in temperature until mortalities reached ~ 30% (Experiment #2). Further, we conducted the two temperature challenges under both normoxic and moderately hypoxic (~ 70% air sat.) conditions. Our experiments show that these salmon can be held at temperatures up to 20 °C, and 20 °C plus moderate hypoxia, for periods of up to a month without any mortalities. However, exposure to the incremental temperature regime resulted in a ~ 10% increase in feed conversion ratio, and the addition of hypoxia decreased feed intake, and thus, growth (15–20% depending on metric). In Experiment #2, specific growth rate and feed intake dropped dramatically after 19 - 20 °C, and mortalities were ~ 15% at 22 °C and ~ 30% by 23 °C. Interestingly, hypoxia did not affect survival at these temperatures, and high temperature + hypoxia enhanced blood oxygen carrying capacity (by 15%) whereas high temperature alone increased relative ventricular mass (by 21%). This research suggests that further increases (i.e., beyond 18 - 20 °C) in coastal temperatures in Atlantic Canada may negatively impact salmon production, especially if combined with hypoxia. In addition, it highlights the need for a better understanding of how these two environmental stressors interact to affect salmon biology/physiology (especially as increases in sea-cage water temperatures are incremental world-wide, and poorly investigated).
The impacts of increasing temperature and moderate hypoxia on the production characteristics, cardiac morphology and haematology of Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar)
A. K. Gamperl,O. Ajiboye,F. Zanuzzo,R. M. Sandrelli,E. C. Peroni,Anne Beemelmanns
Published 2020 in Aquaculture
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2020
- Venue
Aquaculture
- Publication date
2020-03-30
- Fields of study
Biology, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- atlantic salmon
The salmon species used as the experimental fish in this aquaculture study context.
Aliases: Salmo salar
- blood oxygen carrying capacity
The capacity of blood to bind and transport oxygen.
- feed conversion ratio
A feed-use efficiency metric relating feed consumed to biomass gained.
Aliases: FCR
- feed intake
The amount of food eaten by the fish during the exposure period.
- growth performance
Overall growth-related production performance measured in the fish.
Aliases: growth
- incremental temperature regime
An experimental treatment that raised water temperature gradually over time before holding fish at the target temperature.
Aliases: incremental temperature increase, 1 °C per week from 12 °C to 20 °C
- moderate hypoxia
A reduced-oxygen treatment corresponding to moderate oxygen saturation in seawater.
Aliases: ~70% air sat., 70% air sat.
- relative ventricular mass
The mass of the heart ventricle measured relative to body size.
Aliases: ventricular mass
REFERENCES
Showing 1-80 of 80 references · Page 1 of 1
CITED BY
Showing 1-92 of 92 citing papers · Page 1 of 1