20 research outputs found
On the edge of death: Rates of decline and lower thresholds of biochemical condition in food-deprived fish larvae and juveniles
Gaining reliable estimates of how long fish early life stages can survive without feeding and how starvation rate
and time until death are influenced by body size, temperature and species is critical to understanding processes
controlling mortality in the sea. The present study is an across-species analysis of starvation-induced changes in
biochemical condition in early life stages of ninemarine and freshwater fishes. Datawere compiled on changes in
body size (dry weight, DW) and biochemical condition (standardized RNA–DNA ratio, sRD) throughout the
course of starvation of yolk-sac and feeding larvae and juveniles in the laboratory. In all cases, themean biochemical
condition of groups decreased exponentially with starvation time, regardless of initial condition and endogenous
yolk reserves. A starvation rate for individuals was estimated from discrete 75th percentiles of sampled
populations versus time (degree-days, Dd). The 10th percentile of sRD successfully approximated the lowest,
life-stage-specific biochemical condition (the edge of death). Temperature could explain 59% of the variability
in time to death whereas DW had no effect. Species and life-stage-specific differences in starvation parameters
suggest selective adaptation to food deprivation. Previously published, interspecific functions predicting the relationship
between growth rate and sRD in feeding fish larvae do not apply to individuals experiencing prolonged
food deprivation. Starvation rate, edge of death, and time to death are viable proxies for the physiological processes
under food deprivation of individual fish pre-recruits in the laboratory and provide useful metrics for research
on the role of starvation in the sea