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Showing 2 results for Salmonidae


Volume 5, Issue 3 (12-2016)
Abstract

Based on the gut content analysis of 278 specimens of brown trout, Salmo trutta, in the Lar Reservoir and its basin, including streams of Delichay, Ab Sefid, Elarm, Lar and Siah Plas, the summer food habits were found to be general and depended on the abundance of preys. Considering the “index of relative importance” in all stations, the most consumed prey items in the streams were Diptera larva, Ephemeroptera and Trichoptera nymphs, while Hymenoptera constituted the main prey in the reservoir. It was found that the gender had no significant effect on the feeding habits of the adult brown trout. 
Samaneh Poursaeid, Mohammadreza Kalbassi, , , Hossein Baharvand,
Volume 11, Issue 4 (11-2020)
Abstract

Spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) are unique with an important role in the transmission of genetic information to the next generation. Thus, they play an important role for the production of interspecies germ line chimeras. Therefore, the objective of this study was to produce chimera through the intraperitoneal transplantation of Caspian brown trout SSCs into newly-hatched rainbow trout. Spermatogonial cell were isolated from the testes of 8-month-old Caspian brown trout through enzymatic digestion. The spermatogonial cell suspension was enriched using differential plating technique to remove testicular somatic cells. After culturing for 48 h in L15 supplemented with 10% serum, suspended cells were collected and stained with the fluorescent membrane dye PKH26. The stained cells were intraperitoneally transplanted into triploid rainbow trout hatchlings. At 15 and 30 days after transplantation, the recipients were investigated under a fluorescent microscope. The gonads of recipients were dissected for molecular analysis at 180 days after transplantation. Transplanted spermatogonial cells migrated toward and incorporated into recipient genital ridges. The presence of the Caspian brown trout genetic material was confirmed by PCR in 41.4% of the rainbow trout testes. These results demonstrated for the first time that the interspecies spermatogonial transplantation was successful in rainbow trout and that the somatic microenvironment of the rainbow trout gonad can support the colonization and survival of intraperitoneally transplanted cells derived from a fish species belonging to a different genus. Therefore, the SSCs transplantation can be used as a tool for conservation of Caspian brown trout genetic resources.

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