Abstract

The rates of respiration and ammonium excretion of the carnivorous copepod Euchaeta norvegica Boeck decreased by 40 and 70%, respectively, during the first ≈10 h after capture. ETS (electron transport system) activity decreased in parallel with the rate of respiration. Increasing O/N and decreasing N/P atomic ratios during incubation indicated a change from protein to lipid metabolism, suggesting that starvation was the major factor responsible for the depression of the metabolic rates after capture. The adenylate energy charge (EC) ratio was significantly lower during the initial 13 h after capture than subsequently, caused mainly by an elevated AMP level. The total content of adenine nucleotides increased during this period of lowered EC. Starvation could also have been responsible for these changes in the adenine nucleotide levels through degradation of RNA. Our earlier interpretation that the lowered EC values after capture reflected capture stress has not been confirmed. The lactate level of E. norvegica just after capture was low (≈0.1 μg·mg dry wt −1) and thus not indicative of any oxygen debt.

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