Effects of fluoxetine on the swimming and behavioural responses of the Arabian killifish

被引:83
作者
Barry, Michael J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Sultan Qaboos Univ, Dept Biol, Muscat 123, Oman
关键词
Fluoxetine; Fish behaviour; Escape response; Ctrax; ANTIPREDATOR RESPONSES; FISH; PHARMACEUTICALS; AGGRESSION; ANXIETY; ZEBRAFISH; SEROTONIN; ECOTOXICOLOGY; CONSEQUENCES; ECOLOGY;
D O I
10.1007/s10646-012-1036-7
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor fluoxetine has frequently been detected in surface waters around the world. Fluoxetine modulates levels of serotonin, a neurotransmitter that regulates several important physiological and behavioural processes including fear and anxiety, aggression, locomotion and feeding. In this study, groups of sub-adult Arabian killifish (Aphanius dispar) were exposed to either 0, 0.03, 0.3 or 3 mu g/L fluoxetine hydrochloride for 7 days and their swimming behaviour and social interactions videotaped in a circular arena. The fish were subsequently exposed to a predator alarm chemical (from dragonfly larvae fed with A. dispar) and their short-term responses recorded. The video was analysed using the open-sourced software program Ctrax which objectively quantified swimming and social behaviours. Aggression (chasing behaviour was significantly reduced at 3.0 mu g/L fluoxetine. After the addition of the predator alarm chemicals fish responded quickly, increasing the percentage of time spent drifting or motionless and reducing average swimming velocity. Controls and fish exposed to 0.03 or 3 mu g/L fluoxetine reduced swimming speed by 20-30 % but returned to pre-exposure velocities within 6 min. Fish exposed to 0.3 mu g/L fluoxetine reduced swimming speed by 38 % after addition of the predator alarm and did not return to pre-exposure speeds during the recording period (19 min). Schooling behaviour was also affected by fluoxetine and predator alarm with fish exposed to 0.3 mu g/L fluoxetine significantly reducing nearest neighbour distance and swimming speed relative to nearest neighbour the following addition of the predator alarm.
引用
收藏
页码:425 / 432
页数:8
相关论文
共 52 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 2012, J BEHAV BRAIN SCI, DOI [10.4236/jbbs.2012.22022, DOI 10.4236/JBBS.2012.22022]
[2]  
Azmitia EC, 1999, NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOL, V21, pS33
[3]   Behavioral characterization of the alarm reaction and anxiolytic-like effect of acute treatment with fluoxetine in piaucu fish [J].
Barbosa Junior, Augusto ;
Alves, Fabiana Luca ;
Fim Pereira, Aparecida de Sousa ;
Ide, Liliam Midori ;
Hoffmann, Anette .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 2012, 105 (03) :784-790
[4]   Effects of copper, zinc and dragonfly kairomone on growth rate and induced morphology of Bufo arabicus tadpoles [J].
Barry, Michael J. .
ECOTOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY, 2011, 74 (04) :918-923
[5]  
Branson K, 2009, NAT METHODS, V6, P451, DOI [10.1038/NMETH.1328, 10.1038/nmeth.1328]
[6]   Aquatic ecotoxicology of fluoxetine [J].
Brooks, BW ;
Foran, CM ;
Richards, SM ;
Weston, J ;
Turner, PK ;
Stanley, JK ;
Solomon, KR ;
Slattery, M ;
La Point, TW .
TOXICOLOGY LETTERS, 2003, 142 (03) :169-183
[7]   Chemically mediated predator inspection behaviour in the absence of predator visual cues by a characin fish [J].
Brown, GE ;
Paige, JA ;
Godin, JGJ .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2000, 60 :315-321
[8]   Anti-predator responses to conspecific and heterospecific skin extracts by threespine sticklebacks: Alarm pheromones revisited [J].
Brown, GE ;
Godin, JGJ .
BEHAVIOUR, 1997, 134 :1123-1134
[9]   The dynamic nature of antipredator behavior: prey fish integrate threat-sensitive antipredator responses within background levels of predation risk [J].
Brown, Grant E. ;
Rive, Alix C. ;
Ferrari, Maud C. O. ;
Chivers, Douglas P. .
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 2006, 61 (01) :9-16
[10]   Paradigm lost, paradigm found: The re-emergence of hormesis as a fundamental dose response model in the toxicological sciences [J].
Calabrese, EJ .
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 2005, 138 (03) :378-411