AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examined how different background colors (black, green, and control) affect the growth and behavior of Nile tilapia in a controlled setting over 28 days, observing factors like weight gain and movement.
  • - Results indicated that the control group (uncovered aquaria) experienced the best growth and movement, while fish in black aquaria showed the worst performance, including lower glucose levels and weight gains.
  • - The research also revealed that background color influenced fish physiology, with green backgrounds causing increased stress (higher cortisol) and black backgrounds affecting body pigmentation and leading to harmful histological changes in various organs.

Article Abstract

This study tested the reverence of background color with growth, movement behavior, and some body physiological factors in Nile tilapia. Fish were first acclimatized for two weeks in 80 L glass aquaria. In the experimental design, three groups were maintained separately. In 1st group, glass aquaria were covered with black, 2nd with green charts, and 3rd remained uncovered and maintained as a control group. All groups were in three replicates and fed on a 30% protein diet. All fishes were closely observed for movement behavior and growth-related parameters. On the 28th day, fish were anesthetized and blood was drawn from the caudal fin to determine some hematological parameters, cortisol, and glucose level. The highest weight gain and the greatest number of movements throughout the aquarium were observed in the control group. Furthermore, aquarium color determined the body pigmentation color. Black aquarium had the lowest weight gain, glucose level, FCR, DFI, FCE, and CF, while green aquarium had the highest cortisol level. Histological changes observed in black aquaria fish included reduced lamellar size, deformed blood vessels, and cardiac muscle fascicle in the gills, liver, and heart, respectively, while green aquaria fish showed fused lamellae, necrosis, fibrosis, endomiocardiac hyperplasia, and cardiac muscle fascicle. It was concluded that background coloration has a significant effect on the growth performance, behavior, hematology, body color, histology, cortisol, and glucose levels of Oreochromis niloticus, with green background inducing significant stress while black background causes black pigmentation with less growth.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10695-023-01180-xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

movement behavior
12
growth movement
8
behavior body
8
body physiological
8
physiological factors
8
factors nile
8
nile tilapia
8
oreochromis niloticus
8
glass aquaria
8
control group
8

Similar Publications

Spatially ordered recruitment of fast muscles in accordance with movement strengths in larval zebrafish.

Zoological Lett

January 2025

National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Exploratory Research Center On Life and Living Systems (ExCELLS), National Institute for Basic Biology, Okazaki, Aichi, 444-8787, Japan.

In vertebrates, skeletal muscle comprises fast and slow fibers. Slow and fast muscle cells in fish are spatially segregated; slow muscle cells are located only in a superficial region, and comprise a small fraction of the total muscle cell mass. Slow muscles support low-speed, low-force movements, while fast muscles are responsible for high-speed, high-force movements.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aging remains the foremost risk factor for cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases, surpassing traditional factors in epidemiological significance. This review elucidates the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying vascular aging, with an emphasis on sex differences that influence disease progression and clinical outcomes in older adults. We discuss the convergence of aging processes at the macro- and microvascular levels and their contributions to the pathogenesis of vascular diseases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effects of diazepam on sleep depend on the photoperiod.

Acta Pharmacol Sin

January 2025

Laboratory for Neurophysiology, Department of Cell and Chemical Biology, Leiden University, Medical Centre, Leiden, 2333, ZC, The Netherlands.

Daylength (i.e., photoperiod) provides essential information for seasonal adaptations of organisms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rapid growth in bio-logging-the use of animal-borne electronic tags to document the movements, behaviour, physiology and environments of wildlife-offers opportunities to mitigate biodiversity threats and expand digital natural history archives. Here we present a vision to achieve such benefits by accounting for the heterogeneity inherent to bio-logging data and the concerns of those who collect and use them. First, we can enable data integration through standard vocabularies, transfer protocols and aggregation protocols, and drive their wide adoption.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Childhood abuse represents one of the most potent risk factors for the development of psychopathology during childhood, accounting for 30-60% of the risk for onset. While previous studies have separately associated reductions in gray matter volume (GMV) with childhood abuse and internalizing psychopathology (IP), it is unclear whether abuse and IP differ in their structural abnormalities, and which GMV features are related to abuse and IP at the individual level. In a pooled multisite, multi-investigator sample, 246 child and adolescent females between the ages of 8-18 were recruited into studies of interpersonal violence (IPV) and/or IP (i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!