Abstract

Use of the lipofuscin ageing method as a crustacean fisheries research tool requires a calibration of tissue lipofuscin concentration to chronological age that is applicable to the natural population under investigation. Current approaches, involving known-age individuals or analysis of cohorts in neurolipofuscin concentration frequency distributions of the wild population, have advantages and disadvantages. A possible alternative that could be applied to individuals of unknown age involves initial biopsy of lipofuscin-loaded tissue from an eyestalk followed, after a known time period, by sampling of the second eyestalk, providing two successive lipofuscin measurements from the same individual and, thus, the neurolipofuscin accumulation rate in the intervening period. We tested the feasibility of this approach by examining the effect of eyestalk removal itself on subsequent lipofuscin accumulation in the remaining eyestalk using known-age individuals of a convenient decapod model, the signal crayfish, Pacifastacus leniusculus. By comparison with untreated controls, a 61% reduction in average neurolipofuscin accumulation rate in the remaining eyestalk occurred. It is hypothesized that this represents either slowed lipofuscinogenesis due to reduced oxidative metabolism or glycosylation, or increased lipofuscin loss due to enhanced proteolytic or phagocytic activity. It is recommended that the proposed ablation technique not be used for calibration of lipofuscin-based age determinations due to its unpredictable effect on lipofuscin accumulation.

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