Literature DB >> 29949439

Losing Reproduction: Effect of High Temperature on Female Biochemical Composition and Egg Quality in a Freshwater Crustacean with Direct Development, the Red Cherry Shrimp, Neocaridina davidi (Decapoda, Atyidae).

Sofía Baliña, Brenda Temperoni, Laura Susana López Greco, Carolina Tropea.   

Abstract

Maternal provisioning is particularly important in invertebrates with abbreviated development because large energy reserves must be provided for the developing embryo. In this context, the objective of the present study was to analyze in an aquatic invertebrate with direct development the effect of temperature on female biochemical composition and reserve allocation to maturing ovaries, which determine egg quality. A decapod crustacean, the freshwater shrimp Neocaridina davidi, was used as experimental model. Newly hatched juveniles were exposed to 28 °C or 33 °C. Females showed mature ovaries and spawned at 28 °C (control ovigerous females), but no ovigerous female was found at 33 °C. After a 200-day period, half of the females at 33 °C were transferred to 28 °C, where they rapidly showed mature ovaries and spawned (transferred ovigerous females). Ovigerous females and females that did not spawn at 28 °C (control non-ovigerous females) and at 33 °C (high-temperature non-ovigerous females) were sacrificed to determine their biochemical composition. The number, volume, weight, and biochemical composition of the eggs from transferred and control ovigerous females were also analyzed as indicators of their quality. Female biochemical composition was not influenced by temperature, because control and high-temperature non-ovigerous females had similar lipid, protein, and glycogen contents. However, ovarian maturation and spawning were inhibited at 33 °C, which indicates a negative effect of this temperature on nutrient transfer to the oocytes. This effect was rapidly reversed after females were moved to 28 °C; the eggs from control and transferred ovigerous females were of similar quality, except for a lower protein content in the latter. The present results provide valuable information on reserve allocation to reproduction under thermal stress.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CNO, control non-ovigerous female; COF, control ovigerous female; DGC test, Di Rienzo, Guzmán, and Casanoves test; DHA, docosahexaenoic acid; EPA, eicosapentaenoic acid; FA, fatty acid; FAME, fatty acid methyl ester; GC, gas chromatography; HTNO, high-temperature non-ovigerous female; HUFA, highly unsaturated fatty acid; LIN, linoleic acid; MUFA, monounsaturated fatty acid; PCA, principal component analysis; PUFA, polyunsaturated fatty acid; SFA, saturated fatty acid; TOF, transferred ovigerous female

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29949439     DOI: 10.1086/698266

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Bull        ISSN: 0006-3185            Impact factor:   1.818


  2 in total

1.  Latitudinal changes in the lipid content and fatty acid profiles of juvenile female red squat lobsters (Pleuroncodes monodon) in breeding areas of the Humboldt Current System.

Authors:  Fabián Guzmán-Rivas; Marco Quispe-Machaca; Dante Queirolo; Mauricio Ahumada; Ángel Urzúa
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-06-22       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Energetic and reproductive costs of coral recovery in divergent bleaching responses.

Authors:  Sarah E Leinbach; Kelly E Speare; Ashley M Rossin; Daniel M Holstein; Marie E Strader
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-12-07       Impact factor: 4.379

  2 in total

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