Abstract

The effect of tricaine methanesulfonate (MS-222) on the standard (SMR) and routine (RMR) metabolic rates of Raja erinacea was estimated from oxygen-consumption measurements. Data were gathered from a computerized, flow-through respirometry system. Individual trials were run for 96 h at 10 °C on anesthetized and untreated fish. The resulting rates, SMR = 20.1 ± 1.99 SE and RMR = 48.3± 2.5 SE mg O2 kg−1 h−1, for an unanesthetized skate of 0.5 kg standardized weight, are the lowest reported for any elasmobranch. Periodogram analysis revealed a significant light-response component to the oxygen consumption of these fish, indicating a pattern of nocturnal and crepuscular activity. This activity pattern was disrupted in skates subjected to anesthesia. The use of low-dosage MS-222 in conjunction with the respirometry trials provides positive preliminary evidence that this technique may be useful in giving quick, accurate estimates of SMR in the more intractable elasmobranch fishes.

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