Sampling time for different matrices in stress assessment of farmed Atlantic salmon post-smolt

J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2024 May 10:242:106542. doi: 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2024.106542. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

The sustainability of commercial aquaculture production depends critically on prioritizing fish welfare management. Besides monitoring welfare parameters such as fish behaviour and water quality, fish stress level can also provide a reliable measure of the welfare status of farmed fish. Cortisol and 5 of its metabolites (5β-THF, cortisone, 5β-DHE, 5β-THE, β-cortolone) were previously identified by the authors as suitable stress biomarkers of farmed Atlantic salmon. Based on this knowledge, the present study aimed to investigate the time-related dynamics of these metabolites in plasma, skin mucus, bile and faeces over a 72 h- period. The objective was to determine the optimal sampling time for each matrix and to understand the clearance pathway of these metabolites following stress. An experiment was carried out using a total of 90 Atlantic salmon with an average weight of 438 (±132) g. The average sea temperature was 6.9 °C during the experimental period. A control group of 10 fish was first collected before the remaining 80 fish were submitted to a stress of netting and subsequent relocation into two separate cages. From each of these two stress groups, 10 fish were sampled at 1 h, 2 h, 4 h, 6 h and 12 h, 24 h, 48 h, 72 h after the stress event respectively. The concentrations of cortisol and its metabolites were measured at each of the sampling timepoint. The results demonstrated that plasma cortisol metabolites reached the highest concentration 4 h after stress and remained elevated despite the slight decrease for the remaining timepoints. The peak level was observed at 12 h post-stress in skin mucus and 24 h in bile and faeces. The findings suggest that these timepoints are the optimal for sampling Atlantic salmon post-smolt following stressful events in acute stress studies. Furthermore, the results reveal that analysing cortisol and its metabolites, both in free and conjugated forms, rather than free cortisol provides greater flexibility as their concentrations are less affected by sampling procedure. This study confirms the appropriateness of skin mucus and faeces as less-invasive sample matrices for fish stress evaluation and provides a basis for further developing low invasive tools for monitoring the welfare of farmed salmonid.

Keywords: Aquaculture; Atlantic salmon; Bile; Cortisol metabolites; Faeces; Skin mucus; Stress.