Abstract

This study was designed to determine the effects of hormonal manipulation on stress responses in female and male pikeperch. Two-year-old cultured female and male broodstocks with an average weight of 337.4 ± 20.1 (mean ± SE; n = 16) and 318.7 ± 15.1 g (n = 16), respectively, were randomly allocated into four hormonal treatments each containing 4 fish. Two sexual groups of 16 fish for each gender were considered. Sexually mature male and female pikeperch were injected with either physiological saline solution (as control group), common carp pituitary extract (CPE), human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) and or luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone analog (LHRHa2). The blood samples were taken before hormonal injection and after ovulation and spermiation. Then the plasma levels of stress indices (cortisol, glucose, and lactate) were determined. The results showed that all CPE-, HCG-, and LHRHa2- injected males produced sperm. In females treated with CPE and hCG, three of four ovulated, but none of LHRHa2- and saline-injected fish spawned. Significant changes in cortisol, glucose, and lactate levels were observed among the females injected with different hormones. Plasma cortisol and glucose levels increased significantly in males injected with CPE and females injected with hCG, but no significant change was observed in lactate levels before and after hormonal induction. Comparison of two sexes revealed significant differences in glucose levels for females in some groups before injection, while CPE-injected sexes showed significant changes in cortisol and lactate concentrations. The results indicated that the induction of ovulation or spermiation stimulated stress responses especially in female pikeperch, and therefore, all the procedures should be made to minimize the disturbance during the artificial spawning.

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