ISSN:
1095-8649
Source:
Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
Topics:
Biology
Notes:
Compared with incubation at a constant 22° C, exposure of goldfish embryos and larvae to 13° C, under a variety of thermal protocols, caused increased frequencies of abnormal development and, in some cases, reduced survival to hatching. The low-temperature incubation conditions were particularly deleterious when eggs were incubated at 13° C from the outset, regardless of the temperature at which the donor female ovulated and the eggs were fertilized. Significantly higher frequencies of developmental abnormalities were also noted when embryos were transferred from 22°C to 13°C at 6, 24, 128 and, in one case, 175 h after fertilization. In three of five experiments, subjecting embryos and larvae to diel fluctuations between 22 and 13° C, with a 5-h hold at the lower temperature, caused an increase in development abnormalities. These results demonstrate that the thermal requirements of goldfish embryos and larvae necessitate a delay in ovulation and spawning until water is sufficiently warm. Developmental abnormalities can be induced by exposure to cool (13° C) conditions, at least up to the time that swimbladder inflation occurs.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8649.1989.tb03395.x
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