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Environmentally driven changes in Baltic salmon oxidative status during marine migration

Julkaisuvuosi

2020

Tekijät

Kanerva, Mirella; Kiljunen, Mikko; Torniainen, Jyrki; Nikinmaa, Mikko; Dutz, Joerg; Vuori, Kristiina A.

Tiivistelmä

The fitness and recruitment of fish stocks can be markedly affected by environmental disturbances including global warming, eutrophication and contamination. Understanding the effects of environmental stressors on salmon physiology during marine residence is of a global concern as marine survival has decreased. We present a unique combination of physiological responses - antioxidant defence and oxidative damage biomarkers, stable isotopes and contaminant exposure biomarkers - measured from adult Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) collected at the Baltic Sea and studied in relation to environmental variables and fitness estimates. The results demonstrate that feeding populations of salmon display marked temporal and spatial variation in oxidative status. Better oxidative status of salmon was characterized by a higher amount of reduced glutathione (GSH) and decreased lipid peroxidation (LPX), when the weight-at-age of 3–4-year old sprats was higher and contaminant exposure biomarker (EROD) was lower. Summer season conditions, which included cooler sea surface temperature (SST), higher bottom O2 and less cyanobacteria also indicated conditions for better oxidative status. Summer SST was additionally shown to affected glutathione metabolism enzyme activities. Oxidative status was associated with stable isotopes δ13C and δ15N indicating indirect effect of abiotic conditions and lower levels of the food web. Differences in condition factor and growth were associated with oxidative status in one and two sea winter salmon, respectively. Wild salmon survival was higher in years when they had higher GSH and catalase activity and lower LPX. Enhanced glutathione metabolism and increased protein carbonyls were associated with higher occurrence of yolk-sac fry mortality (M74). Our results show that oxidative status can provide information on exposure to complex combinations of environmental conditions and stressors in the wild and provide a link of physiological function to individual and population level fitness effects.
Näytä enemmän

Organisaatiot ja tekijät

Helsingin yliopisto

Vuori Kristiina A.

Kiljunen Mikko

Jyväskylän yliopisto

Torniainen Jyrki Orcid -palvelun logo

Kiljunen Mikko

Turun yliopisto

Kanerva Mirella

Nikinmaa Mikko

Julkaisutyyppi

Julkaisumuoto

Artikkeli

Emojulkaisun tyyppi

Lehti

Artikkelin tyyppi

Alkuperäisartikkeli

Yleisö

Tieteellinen

Vertaisarvioitu

Vertaisarvioitu

OKM:n julkaisutyyppiluokitus

A1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä

Julkaisukanavan tiedot

Kustantaja

Elsevier

Volyymi

742

Artikkelinumero

140259

Julkaisu­foorumi

66887

Julkaisufoorumitaso

2

Avoin saatavuus

Avoin saatavuus kustantajan palvelussa

Ei

Rinnakkaistallennettu

Kyllä

Muut tiedot

Tieteenalat

Ympäristötiede; Ekologia, evoluutiobiologia; Eläinlääketiede

Avainsanat

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Julkaisumaa

Alankomaat

Kustantajan kansainvälisyys

Kansainvälinen

Kieli

englanti

Kansainvälinen yhteisjulkaisu

Kyllä

Yhteisjulkaisu yrityksen kanssa

Ei

DOI

10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.140259

Julkaisu kuuluu opetus- ja kulttuuriministeriön tiedonkeruuseen

Kyllä