Abstract

The histochemical characteristics and distribution of muscle fibre types have been investigated in the swimming muscles of the robalo, Eleginops maclovinus and the lorcho, Patagonotothen tessellata , Subantarctic notothenioids that inhabit the Beagle Channel. The fibre types were differentiated on the basis of glycogen and lipid contents and succinate dehydrogenase and myofibrillar ATPase (mATPase) activities. White, red, intermediate and tonic fibres were present in the axial muscle of both species. The same fibre types were identified in the pectoral fin adductor muscles, although the intermediate type was absent. The mATPase technique performed at room temperature (21oC) allowed a good differentiation of fibre types, overcoming the problems found by previous researchers when applying this technique to Antarctic notothenioids. Four different zones (peripheral, mosaic, main and adjacent to the bone) were found in the adductor profundis muscle. The proportion of the zones varied along the length of the adductor muscle. For both species, the percentage of red fibres found in the axial muscles was less than 5%, indicating that sustained swimming ability is not dependent on these muscles. The pectoral muscle mass/carcase mass ratio was significantly greater in E. maclovinus than in P. tessellata , reflecting a greater capacity for sustained swimming using pectoral fins.

Highlights

  • Notothenioids are dominant in the Antarctic fish fauna comprising around 110 species grouped in six families (Ekau, 1991)

  • The aim of the present work was to study the swimming muscles of two Subantarctic notothenioid species with different locomotory habits, through the characterisation of the abundance and distribution of muscle fibre types continuing with comparative studies on Antarctic species that live at different temperatures

  • The lateral superficial muscle in P. tessellata was composed of tonic, intermediate and red fibres and constituted around

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Summary

Introduction

Notothenioids are dominant in the Antarctic fish fauna comprising around 110 species grouped in six families (Ekau, 1991) This sub-order is highly endemic from Antarctic waters, with about 79% of species living south of the Antarctic Convergence (Eastman, 1993). Adults of most of the notothenioid species are demersal and sedentary, feeding and spawning on the bottom larvae are pelagic. They lack a swim bladder and most of them are denser than seawater (Andriashev, 1965; Eastman, 1985; 1988; Eastman and De Vries, 1982; Fernández, 1997). The family Nototheniidae is the one that shows the greatest diversity in length, body form, habitat and geographic distribution, with about 15 species living in Subantarctic waters (Eastman, 1993)

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