| Literature DB >> 24019879 |
Stefano Marras1, Shaun S Killen, Paolo Domenici, Guy Claireaux, David J McKenzie.
Abstract
Teleost fishes exhibit wide and temporally stable inter-individual variation in a suite of aerobic and anaerobic locomotor traits. One mechanism that could allow such variation to persist within populations is the presence of tradeoffs between aerobic and anaerobic performance, such that individuals with a high capacity for one type of performance have a reduced capacity for the other. We investigated this possibility in European seabass Dicentrarchuslabrax, each measured for a battery of indicators of maximum locomotor performance. Aerobic traits comprised active metabolic rate, aerobic scope for activity, maximum aerobic swimming speed, and stride length, using a constant acceleration test. Anaerobic traits comprised maximum speed during an escape response, maximum sprint speed, and maximum anaerobic burst speed during constant acceleration. The data provided evidence of significant variation in performance among individuals, but there was no evidence of any trade-offs among any traits of aerobic versus anaerobic swimming performance. Furthermore, the anaerobic traits were not correlated significantly among each other, despite relying on the same muscular structures. Thus, the variation observed may reflect trade-offs with other morphological, physiological or behavioural traits.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24019879 PMCID: PMC3760853 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0072815
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Coefficients of variation of 9 variables measured in European sea bass.
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| 18.7 |
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| 14.8 |
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| 23.5 |
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| 17.1 |
| Stride length | 14.6 |
| AMR | 17.5 |
| RMR | 13.7 |
| Aerobic scope | 34.5 |
| Recovery time | 38.4 |
Figure 1Relationship between aerobic gait transition speed (U gt) and values of UCAT beyond U gt (U CAT-gt).
Figure 2Relationship between (A) U gt and U escape and (B) between U gt and U sprint.
Pearson correlations for the four swimming performance traits, stride length, metabolic rates and recovery time after exhaustion.
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| -0.126P=0.457 | -0.173P=0.306 | 0.083P=0.626 | 0.082P=0.639 | -0.073P=0.673 | -0.119P=0.495 | -0.027P=0.867 | 0.215P=0.216 |
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| 0.165P=0.328 | -0.002P=0.992 | 0.004P=0.998 | 0.245P=0.156 | -0.144P=0.411 | 0.289P=0.092 | 0.235P=0.174 | |
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| 0.542P<0.001 | 0.663P<0.001 | 0.014P=0.937 | -0.285P=0.097 | 0.118P=0.500 | 0.056P=0.748 | ||
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| 0.566P<0.001 | -0.037P=0.831 | -0.372P=0.028 | 0.101P=0.565 | 0.051P=0.772 | |||
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| -0.033P=0.850 | -0.229P=0.186 | 0.052P=0.767 | -0.046P=0.797 | ||||
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| 0.090P=0.607 | 0.931P<0.001 | 0.164P=0.347 | |||||
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| -0.280P=0.043 | -0.231P=0.182 | ||||||
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| 0.243P=0.160 |
For each correlation, Pearson’s correlation coefficient is shown in the first row, P value in the second row.
Figure 3Relationship between RMR and U gt.