Energetics Flashcards
What is energetics
How fish species obtain food from the environment to meet metabolic demands – postingestion
Do herbivores or carnivores have a longer digestive track
herbivores having longer ones than carnivores
How do fish get their food?
most fish do not chew their food, relying instead on physical and chemical breakdown in stomach and upper digestive tract to get nutrients
Some taxonomic groups (e.g., cichlids, telmatherinids, cyprinids) have bony toothed pad that pre-process food prior to stomach called pharyngeal jaws
- Stomach can be highly distendable to store and breakdown food
Upper pharyngeal jaw
Muscle contractions and acidic secretions function to physically and chemically breakdown food
pyloric caeca and extra folds in digestive tract can allow for more efficient nutrient extractions
Proteolytic enzymes that work at low pH continue the digestion until soupy mix is passed where bile and pancreatic juices(withHCO3- to neutralise pH) continue to digest fats, lipids and proteins.
Once metabolic demands are met where can extra nutrients be stored
Carbohydrates: glycogen in liver and muscles
Lipids and protein: muscle / fat tissue as growth
What is bioenergetics
The study of the processing of energy by living systems, at any level of biological organization
In fish:
* The bioenergetics of individuals
* Using this information to develop expected energy budgets for populations
* Making predictions about fish production and/or habitat suitability for given species over a given set of environmental conditions
Bioenergetic models
Most models try to predict fish growth and so isolate the Growth variable (G)
Using the model over all sizes in a species, and over all species can generate ecosystem-wide expected growth in biomass
estimating growth lets us know if habitat is suitable
egestion vs excretion
egestion= leftover nutrients that wasn’t metabolized that does not get processed/digested, goes right through the system
excretion=stuff gets processed but can’t be used like excess nitrates, toxins, etc from digested stuff
Energy budgets
varies largely among species and depends on the empirical parameters derived for each species.
Can also model the suitability of a habitat to support the energy requirements and potential growth of a species
Empirically derived physiological rate parameters
Framework is based on determining the effects of specific environmental conditions on species-specific physiology from lab-based studies
Physiological rates (e.g., feeding rates or C, or respiration rates R) are characterized by non-linear relationships to key environmental parameters such as temperature
physiological rates that impacted by various environmental parameters in similar complex non-linear relationships: (6)
- Temperature
- Salinity
- Dissolved O2
- Prey availability
- Competitive interactions
- Contaminants/stress
- Some of the effects are also not likely independent of one another (
Bioenergetics in fisheries management
The Wisconsin Bioenergetics model
Increasing number of species (> 105) are physiologically characterized from empirical studies (lab based) to determine parameters for energy conversion rates (e.g., C, R, etc,..)
Used to predict the status of fish populations and even establish stocking rates within a managed system
Energetics and buoyancy regulation
Buoyancy is energetically / metabolically expensive
Many elasmobranchs (cartilaginous fishes) swim extensively, use fins to direct themselves up or down have lighter skeleton = helps minimise energy expenditures
Other species (bottom dwellers) just sink and remain near the bottom
- Lipid or fat infused bones are also lighter and more buoyant and this is often enough to help with buoyancy issues
Buoyancy regulation swim bladder
bony fishes (Teleostei) use gas filled “swim bladder” to regulate buoyancy ( gas filled chamber in the gut, permeable to diffusion only at ovale, changes with pressure)
Swim bladder and compression
At increasing depths, the swim bladder compresses and the fish will continue to sink
Needs gas injection
- As a fish rises in the water column, pressure lessens and the gas in the bladder expands, and the fish will rise continuously
Needs gas expulsion
Buoyancy regulation for Physostomous fish (more primitive)
trouts and salmons
Pneumatic duct connects swim bladder to esophagus
- Air expelled through duct allows fish to “burp” out air when rising
- Gas must be secreted into swim bladder from blood