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Reproductive performance of common dentex, Dentex dentex, broodstock held under different photoperiod and constant temperature conditions
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Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -
International audience. The effect of photoperiod and temperature on the timing and the quality of spawning, and on associated endocrine changes in circulating 17beta-oestradiol, 11-ketotestoserone (11-KT) and vitellogenin (Vtg) were investigated in common dentex, Dentex dentex, undergoing their second reproductive cycle. The possibility was also explored of using the measurement of steroids in the culture water of broodstock tanks, rather than in individual blood plasma samples, as a potentially useful tool for assessing the physiological state of a fish without disturbing them. One group of fish was exposed to a simulated natural seasonal cycle and ambient temperature (CONTROL). The other two groups were exposed to simulated seasonal photoperiod cycles (12 month-long) but which were phase-shifted either three months before (ADVANCED) or after (DELAYED) the natural cycle. Temperature was kept at 19.4 +/- 0.9 degreesC all-year-round. In the CONTROL, spawning started in mid-April and lasted until mid-June, while in the ADVANCED group, spawning started 4 months earlier and in the DELAYED group 2 months later than the CONTROL. The total egg production, egg quality, hatching rate, relative fecundity, and spawning index of the experimental groups were similar to the controls. The differences in spawning time induced by photothermal manipulation were associated with a difference in the timing of peak concentrations of plasma E-2, 11-KT and Vtg. In all three groups, the amounts of conjugated 17,20 -dihydroxy-4-pregnen-3-one (17,20beta-P) and free and sulfated 11-KT which could be extracted from the water during the spawning period were significantly higher than those found in the preovulatory period. However, the differences were mostly less than 2-fold suggesting that, at least under the conditions employed in this study, the method was of limited use for non-intrusive detection of gonadogenesis and spawning (as had been hoped). The observed differences in spawning time and in the seasonal changes of sex steroids and Vtg confirm and extend the findings on marine fish.