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Patterns of Growth in Fishes. Grow + Survival = Reproduction. Growth patterns in fishes. Context for study of growth: Success = viable offspring Reproduction = survival to maturity Maturity = growth. Factors Affecting Growth.
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Patterns of Growth in Fishes Grow + Survival = Reproduction
Growth patterns in fishes • Context for study of growth: • Success = viable offspring • Reproduction = survival to maturity • Maturity = growth
Factors Affecting Growth • Temperature– Most important environmental factor – Growth increases up to a point (indeterminant) • – Fish tend to prefer temperatures where their growth is maximal • Hormones– Growth hormone secreted by pituitary – Steroid hormones from gonads
Growth patterns in fishes • Dissolved Oxygen– More is better • Ammonia– High concentrations are worse! (slow growth) • Salinity– Growth is altered when fish are not in their optimum salinity
Growth patterns in fishes • Competition – Generally slows growth • Food– Availability & quality affect growth • Photoperiod– Longer days increase growth
Growth patterns in fishes • • Age & Maturity– Growth is rapid early in life – With maturity more energy is diverted to gonadal tissue – Larger fish need more energy to maintain body • Conditioning(Weight lifting for fish??)
Bioenergetic context • Growth is the accumulation of somatic (body) tissue that depends on a surplus of energy consumed
Bioenergetic context • Bioenergetic equation: • I = M + G + R + E • I = energy ingested • M = energy used to maintain healthy tissues • G = energy for growing somatic tissue • R = energy for reproduction • E = energy “lost” through inefficiency of energy transfers, etc.
Growth Rate • Anything in the internal or external environment that increases or decreases intake: • food availability • competition with other fish for food • time spent hiding from or escaping predators • time spent defending a territory
Growth Rate • Anything in the internal or external environment that increases or decreases M: • temperature • dissolved oxygen • toxins - NH4+, heavy metals, organic toxins
Growth Rate • Energy for growth is a tradeoff with energy for reproduction • general pattern: grow first, then reproduce • increased size --> • increased fecundity (females) • increased territorial success (males, females) • increased metabolic efficiency (to a point)
Fish growth often is periodic • Seasonal variation in temperature, food availability, spawning activity, can cause seasonal growth cessation (Can you think of examples where this might happen?)
Fish growth often is periodic • Seasonal variation in temperature, food availability, spawning activity, can cause seasonal growth cessation • If periods are regular (e.g., annual or daily), a record of growth and no-growth periods is formed in hard structures: • scales, fin spines or rays, vertebral centra, opercle bones, ear bones (otoliths)
Fish growth often is periodic • Periodic growth marks allow estimation of growth rates by counting and measuring distances between growth checks
Endocrine Growth Regulation • Pituitary growth hormone: • increases appetite • increases food conversion efficiency • increases production of stomatomedin (stimulate cell growth and division)
When Am I An Adult? • Juvenile when you still have larval features. • When larval features gone, then (and only then) you are an adult. • Transition can be abrupt! • Growth = metamorphosis • Growth = significant change in body size (material)
When Am I An Adult? • REM: Age and size are constantly in a trade off. • More eggs if older, but may die first. • Younger fish often produce fewer eggs and are weaker from the attempt. May die anyway. • Fish under heavy predation pressure will reproduce quickly.
What Counts as Growth? • “Growth” in fish is measured in creative ways. 1. Change in amount of body material? (how do you measure this?) • Is growth always positive? • Growth could be a change in calories stored as body (somatic) or reproductive (gonadal) tissue.
POPULATION SIZE GROWTH • 1. MARK/RECAPTURE • Tagging fish with PIT • (Passive integrated transponder) tags • Dyes • Discs • Implanted magnets • Hanging Tags • Advantage: Good data • Disadvantage: • a. Methods must not interfere with normal fish behavior. • Can’t interfere with recapture efforts either. • Expensive • Time consuming
Raise in a controlled environment (good for aquaculture) GR =100 (logeWf-logeWi)/tf-ti)
How do different forms of mortality effect overall population growth??
Internal regulation of growth - endocrine system • Anabolic steriods stimulate growth: • testosterone in males • estrogen in females • corticosteroids in both sexes
Internal regulation of growth - endocrine system • Thyroid hormones stimulate growth • Also regulate metamorphosis
Fish growth is indeterminate • Growth continues throughout life cycle • limits to ultimate size are BIOTIC (food availability, metabolic efficiency) and not MECHANICAL (counteracting gravity, etc.)
Fish growth is indeterminate • Advantages to indeterminate growth: • larger size yields greater efficiency
Fish growth is indeterminate • Advantages to indeterminate growth: • larger size yields greater efficiency • larger size yields more food options • faster swimming • larger gape size • better sensory range & acuity
Fish growth is indeterminate • Advantages to indeterminate growth: • larger size yields greater efficiency • larger size yields more food options • larger size reduces number of potential predators • swimming speed • gape size