Stress in Fish,
Part II: Why You Should Care About Stress in Fish
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Would you like
your fish to have their brightest coloration and best possible
finnage? Are you interested in the animal's growth or reproduction?
Do you want to keep your fish in excellent health? If you
answered yes to any of these questions, then you will be interested
in learning about stress and concerned about how it can affect
your fish. Why is stress important to understand? Because
of the affect it has upon the health, beauty, reproduction,
growth, longevity and survival of your prized specimens!
Stress has many
consequences to the overall quality of health and longevity
of fish. It causes biochemical, physiological and behavioral
changes. Stress factors induce the mobilization and reallocation
of energy (Barton, et, al. 1988), increase oxygen uptake and
transfer, and suppression of immune function (Maule, et, al.,
1989. Mock & Peters, 1990. Pickering & Pottinger,
1987b). Any response or adaptation to stress requires the
expenditure of energy that would otherwise be utilized for
maintaining normal body functions such as growth, digestion,
osmoregulation, disease resistance, healing and reproduction.
Think of energy as a pie with only so many pieces; stress
consumes a portion of the animal's energy that could be put
to better use (Barton & Iwama, 1991. Schreck, 1982).
Fish are more
susceptible to stress than many other animals because of a
greater dependence upon their surrounding environment (Wedemeyer,
1996a). The delicate surfaces of the gills come into direct
contact with chemical toxins that cause stress; this is exacerbated
in marine fish by the fact they actually drink large quantities
of the water.
Four important
body functions are closely associated with processes in the
gills: gas exchange, hydromineral (osmoregulation) control,
acid-base balance and nitrogenous waste excretion. These processes
are possible because of the close proximity of the blood flowing
through the gills to the surrounding water, as well as the
differences in the chemical composition of these two fluids
(for example, the salt content of fish blood is about 1/3
that of seawater and roughly 100 times that of freshwater).
Adrenaline released
during the stress response increases blood flow to the gills
to provide for the increased oxygen demands of stress. The
release of adrenaline into the blood stream elevates the heart
rate, blood flow and blood pressure. This increases the volume
of blood in vessels contained within the gills, increasing
the surface area of the gills while helping fish absorb more
oxygen from the water. The elevated blood flow allows increased
oxygen uptake for respiration but also increases the permeability
of the gills to water and ions. This is what is known as the
osmorespiratory compromise (Folmar & Dickhoff, 1980. Mazeaud,
et, al., 1977). In saltwater fish, this leads to accelerated
ion influxes and water losses. In freshwater fish, the effects
are reversed; it increases water influx and ion losses. Small
fish are more susceptible to hydromineral disturbances due,
in part, to a higher gill-surface-to-body-mass-ratio than
their larger counterparts.
One of the most
characteristic aspects of stress in fish is osmoregulatory
disturbance, which is related to the effects of both catecholamine
and cortisol hormones. The extent of the disturbance following
stress depends upon the ionic and osmotic gradients (difference)
between the internal fluids of the fish and its surrounding
environment (water). If the stress is persistent and of sufficient
intensity, changes in the cellular structure of the gills
may occur under the influence of cortisol. In this situation,
increased death and turnover rates of branchial epithelial
cells leads to accelerated aging of the gills. These degenerating
and newly-formed gill cells do not function normally, which
further limits the fish's ability to maintain water and ion
homeostasis under stressful conditions. Thus, acute stress
limits the fish's capacity to osmoregulate, and prolonged
periods of extreme stress may result in osmotic shock and
death.
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Cortisol released
as part of the response to chronic and acute stress affects
the digestion of carbohydrates, proteins and lipids. This
reduces the useable amount of nutrition animals receive from
foods. Stress affects circulating levels of reproductive hormones
caused by handling (an acute stressor) and confinement (a
chronic stressor) (Safford and Thomas, 1987). Abrupt or drastic
temperature changes may weaken fish to the point that latent
bacterial infections worsen. Chronic stress can lead to generalized
melanosis (discoloration or body darkening), fin fraying and
loss of tissue between fin rays (frayed fin syndrome), especially
in the pectoral, anal, and caudal fins.
Because stress
evokes elevated cortisol blood plasma levels, resulting in
suppressed immune function, and drains metabolic energy, the
effects of stress are cumulative (Pennell, 1991), reducing
the capacity to tolerate subsequent or additional stressors.
Stress suppresses the immune response and can predispose fish
to disease. Stress reduces antibody production (Pickering
and Pottinger 1987b, Pickering, A.D. 1987), slows the body's
response to injury or infection and increases susceptibility
to pathogens. This is particularly true with facultative or
opportunistic pathogens. Reduced surface mucus production
is associated with stress in fish, and since the mucus layer
is a major defense barrier to pathogens, less mucus can mean
increased susceptibility to infection. A weakened ability
to engulf invading bacteria is due to the action of elevated
blood cortisol that affects the fluidity of macrophage membranes,
but the primary effect is that the macrophage cannot kill
the pathogen after ingesting it.
Sometimes the
effects of stress are not immediately apparent. Delayed Mortality
Syndrome or disease outbreaks that can take from 2 to 14 days
after a stressful event to manifest (Noga, 2000. Stoskopf,
1993). Even slightly elevated levels of cortisol can suppress
immune function by decreasing antibody production and slowing
the body's response to injury and infection.
Long-term or chronic
stress can slow or stop growth, due in part to cortisol released
in response to stress that affects the metabolism of carbohydrates,
lipids, and proteins. Stress can prevent reproductive activity
while energy that is normally directed toward spawning is
diverted to the more immediate needs of homeostasis.
Fish have a limited
amount of energy, and stress increases energy demand. Chronic
or continuous stress keeps the metabolism running at a faster
rate because of this increased energy demand. This consumes
energy, oxygen and glucose (Barton and Iwama, 1991). The normal
functions of physiological equilibrium such as respiration,
tissues repair, locomotion, and hydromineral regulation take
priority over the investment activities of reproduction and
growth. This means the diversion of energy to deal with an
elevated metabolism means that less is available for growth
and reproduction.
In order for fish
to have a natural adaptive response to stress, they must first
sense the presence of a stressor. The sensory cues to stressors
can be chemical, hydrodynamic, acoustic, thermal, electrical,
mechanical, light or other visual cues. The fish's abilities
to sense a stressor (sensory behavior), recognize that stressor
as a threat (stimulus recognition) and respond to the stressor
(response capabilities) can all be affected by the duration
and severity of stress (Pearson, Miller and Olla, 1980).
A mild stressor
that is short in duration causes a correspondingly mild and
short stress response. Severe stressors that continue for
extended periods have the greatest impact and long-term consequences.
The effects of stress on immune function can linger for some
time after other physiological changes have returned to pre-stress
levels (Maule et al., 1989).
References
Barton, B.A.
& Iwama, G.K. "Physiological Changes in Fish from
Stress in Aquaculture with Emphasis on the Response and
Effects or Corticosteriods." Annual Review of Fish Diseases,
1, 3-26, 1991.
Barton, B.A.,
Schreck, C.B. & Fowler, L.G. "Fasting and Diet Content
Affect Stress-induced Changes in Plasma Glucose and Cortisol
in Juvenile Chinook Salmon." Progressive Fish-Culturist,
50, 16-22, 1988.
Folmar, L.C.,
& Dickhoff, W.W. "The Parr-Smolt Transformation and
Seawater Adaptation in Salmonids (review)." Aquaculture,
21, 1-37, 1980.
Maule, A.G.,
Tripp, R.A., Kaattari, S.L. & Shreck, C.B. "Stress
Alters Immune Function and Disease Resistance in Chinook
Salmon (Oncorrhynchus tshawytscha)." Journal of Endocrinology,
120, 135-142, 1989.
Mazeaud, M.M.
Mazeaud, F. & Donaldson, E.M. "Primary and Secondary
Effects of Stress in Fish: Some New Data with a General
Review," Transactions of the American Fisheries Society,
106, 201-12, 1977.
Mock, A., &
Peters, G. "Lysozyme Activity in Rainbow Trout, Oncorhynchus
mykiss, Stressed by Hnadling, Transport, and Wtare Pollution."
Journal of Fish Biology, 37, 873-885, 1990.
Noga,
E.J. "Fish Disease: Diagnosis and Treatment." Ames,
IA: Iowa State University Press, 2000.
Pearson,
W.H., Miller, S.E. & Olla, B.L. "Chemoreception in
the Food Searching and Feeding Behavior of the Red Hake,
Urophycis Chuss. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology
and Ecology, 48, 139-150, 1980.
Pennell, W.
"Fish Tranportation Handbook." Province of British
Columbia, Ministry of Fisheries, Victoria BC, Canada. 1991.
Pickering,
A.D. "Stress Responses and Disease Resistance in Farmed
Fish." In Aqua Nor 87, Conference 3: Fish Diseases -
a Threat to the International Fish Farming Industry, pp.
35-49. Norske Fiskeoppdretters Forening, Trondheim. 1987.
Pickering,
A.D. & Pottinger, T.G. "Crowding causes Prolonged
Leucopenia in Salmonid Fish, Despite Interrenal Acclimation."
Journal of Fish Biology, 32, 701-712, 1987b.
Safford, S.E.
& Thomas, P. "Effects of Capture and Handling on
Circulatory Levels of Gonadal Steroids and Cortisol in the
Spotted Seatrout, Cynoscion nebulosus." In Procedings
of the Third International Symposium on the Reproductive
Physiology of Fish. Idler, D.W. Crim, L.W. & Walsh,
J.M. (eds.) pp. 312, 1987. Memorial University of Newfoundland,
St. John's.
Schreck, C.B.
"Stress and Rearing of Salmoniods." Aquaculture,
28, 241-249, 1982.
Wedemeyer,
G.A. "Transportation and Handling." In Principles of Salmonid
Culture. Pennell, W. & Barton, B.A. (eds.) pp. 727-758.
Elsevier Science B.V. Amsterdam.
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