Abstract

Gilthead seabream specimens were subjected to an intense short-term crowding stress of 100kg m−3for 2h. After 0, 1, 2, 3 and 4 days, blood glucose and serum cortisol levels, serum complement activity, phagocytic and respiratory burst activities of head-kidney leucocytes, and the percentage of monocyte/macrophages and granulocytes in head-kidney and circulating blood were determined. An immediate effect of the stress was a depression in complement and phagocytic activities, both of which recovered after 3 or 2 days, respectively, while respiratory burst remained unaffected. The depression of phagocytosis in head-kidney leucocytes seemed to correlate with stress-induced migration of active cells from the organ to circulating blood. The present results point to the importance of minimising intense short-term crowding stress in order to reduce possible states of immunodepression in farmed fish.

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