2011
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.054205
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Repeatability of standard metabolic rate, active metabolic rate and aerobic scope in young brown trout during a period of moderate food availability

Abstract: SUMMARYStandard metabolic rate (SMR) and active metabolic rate (AMR) are two fundamental physiological parameters providing the floor and ceiling in aerobic energy metabolism. The total amount of energy available within these two parameters confines constitutes the absolute aerobic scope (AAS). Previous studies on fish have found SMR to closely correlate with dominance and position in the social hierarchy, and to be highly repeatable over time when fish were provided an ad libitum diet. In this study we tested… Show more

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Cited by 148 publications
(180 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
(65 reference statements)
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“…Additional support for such a link is found in mammalian species, where the liver also contributes to a disproportionately large fraction of basal metabolic rate (Rolfe and Brown 1997). Our observations illustrate that an understanding of interindividual variability in SMR and MMR can be gained only through consideration of the mitochondrial properties of tissue specifically linked to particular whole-organism metabolic traits (John-Alder 1983;Garland 1984;Garland and Else 1987;Norin and Malte 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 55%
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“…Additional support for such a link is found in mammalian species, where the liver also contributes to a disproportionately large fraction of basal metabolic rate (Rolfe and Brown 1997). Our observations illustrate that an understanding of interindividual variability in SMR and MMR can be gained only through consideration of the mitochondrial properties of tissue specifically linked to particular whole-organism metabolic traits (John-Alder 1983;Garland 1984;Garland and Else 1987;Norin and Malte 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 55%
“…We then determined the MMR of each fish by measuring its oxygen consumption in a closed respirometry system immediately following exhaustive exercise. The exhaustion protocol consisted of continuously chasing the fish against a circular current (Norin and Malte 2012), with fish being defined as exhausted when they could no longer swim, were unresponsive, and did not resist being picked up by hand. Both metabolic measurements were found to be repeatable when the same group of fish as used in this experiment were maintained on a stable food regime (repeatability of SMR: r p 0.78, n p 38, P !…”
Section: Whole-organism Oxygen Consumptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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