ONTOGENY AND EVOLUTION OF SALINITY TOLERANCE IN ANADROMOUS SALMONIDS - HORMONES AND HETEROCHRONY

被引:77
|
作者
MCCORMICK, SD
机构
[1] Anadromous Fish Research Center, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Turners Falls, 01376, Massachusetts
来源
ESTUARIES | 1994年 / 17卷 / 1A期
关键词
D O I
10.2307/1352332
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Use of estuaries and oceans by salmonids varies greatly, from no use in nonanadromous species, to movement toward the sea soon after hatching and emergence in some Pacific salmon. This variation is accompanied by large differences in the ontogeny of salinity tolerance among salmonids. Some species acquire increased salinity tolerance early in development, whereas others develop this characteristic much later, indicating there is a heterochrony (change in timing) in the development of salinity tolerance in salmonids. The basic physiological mechanisms for ion regulation in seawater (such as increased gill chloride cells, gill Na+,K+-ATPase activity, membrane permeability, and drinking rate) are common to atl salmonids. What determines the differences in salinity tolerance among the salmonids is not the basic mechanisms for salt secretion but the environmental and ontogenetic control of these mechanisms. In salmonids such as pink and chum salmon that enter seawater soon after emergence, acclimation to seawater may he controlled largely by internal (ontogenetic) information. In smolting salmonids that acquire increased salinity tolerance 1-2 yr after hatching, photoperiod is the dominant environmental cue. In nonsmolting species that migrate 2-3 yr after hatching, salinity itself may be the primary stimulus for salt secretory mechanisms. Physiological changes triggered by developmental and environmental cues are mediated by endocrine factors. Treatments with cortisol, growth hormone, and insulin-like growth factor I have been shown to increase seawater tolerance of salmonids, whereas prolactin is inhibitory. Differences in developmental patterns of endocrine activity (such as secretion, binding proteins, and receptors) are hypothesized to be responsible for the differences in timing (heterochrony) of increased salinity tolerance among and within salmonid species.
引用
收藏
页码:26 / 33
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Ontogeny, phylogeny, and heterochrony in human evolution.
    Leigh, SR
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY, 2001, : 97 - 97
  • [3] HETEROCHRONY - THE EVOLUTION OF ONTOGENY - MCKINNEY,ML, MCNAMARA,KJ
    MABEE, P
    [J]. SCIENCE, 1991, 254 (5033) : 874 - 875
  • [4] IMPORTANCE OF RIVER MIGRATION TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF SEAWATER TOLERANCE IN COLUMBIA RIVER ANADROMOUS SALMONIDS
    ZAUGG, WS
    PRENTICE, EF
    WAKNITZ, FW
    [J]. AQUACULTURE, 1985, 51 (01) : 33 - 47
  • [5] The ontogeny of salinity tolerance in the American shad, Alosa sapidissima
    Zydlewski, J
    McCormick, SD
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 1997, 54 (01) : 182 - 189
  • [6] Variation in salinity tolerance between and within anadromous subpopulations of pike (Esox lucius)
    Johanna Sunde
    Carl Tamario
    Petter Tibblin
    Per Larsson
    Anders Forsman
    [J]. Scientific Reports, 8
  • [7] Testing heterochrony: Connecting skull shape ontogeny and evolution of feeding adaptations in baleen whales
    Lanzetti, Agnese
    Portela-Miguez, Roberto
    Fernandez, Vincent
    Goswami, Anjali
    [J]. EVOLUTION & DEVELOPMENT, 2023, 25 (4-5) : 257 - 273
  • [8] Heterochrony and developmental innovation:: Evolution of female gametophyte ontogeny in Gnetum, a highly apomorphic seed plant
    Friedman, WE
    Carmichael, JS
    [J]. EVOLUTION, 1998, 52 (04) : 1016 - 1030
  • [9] ONTOGENY OF SALINITY TOLERANCE IN THE INVASIVE SHRIMP PALAEMON MACRODACTYLUS (CARIDEA: PALAEMONIDAE)
    Guadalupe Vazquez, Maria
    Cristina Bas, Claudia
    Daniel Spivak, Eduardo
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY, 2016, 36 (02) : 214 - 219
  • [10] Ontogeny of salinity tolerance and osmoregulation in the sea-bream Sparus aurata
    Bodinier, Charlotte
    Sucre, Elliott
    Lecurieux-Belfond, Laura
    Charmantier, Guy
    [J]. COMPARATIVE BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY A-MOLECULAR & INTEGRATIVE PHYSIOLOGY, 2009, 153A (02): : S77 - S77