Genre
- Journal Article
Growth hormone transgenic coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch fed at the same ration level as non-transgenic controls (Tc) had the same growth rate as non-transgenic controls (Nt). In contrast, growth hormone transgenic coho salmon (Tf) fed ad libitum ate about twice as much and had much higher growth rates than the other two groups. The most obvious result was the significantly larger caeca in the Tf group relative to both Nt or pair-fed Tc. The Tf fish had more caeca that were longer. The results suggested that the effect was indirect and the enlarged caeca required both the GHtransgene and hyperphagia to cause enlarged caecal capacity. A small part of the results, however, also suggested that there was a direct effect of the GHtransgene on some gut tissues, particularly the intestine.
Stevens, E. D.: Department of Zoology, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, N1G 2W1, Canada.
Oxford; UK
Blackwell Publishing
Accession Number: 20053127520. Publication Type: Journal Article. Language: English. Number of References: 36 ref. Registry Number: 9002-72-6. Subject Subsets: Agricultural Biotechnology; Animal Breeding
Source type: Electronic(1)
Language
- English
Subjects
- caecum
- Oncorhynchus kisutch
- Oncorhynchus
- Intestines
- Osteichthyes
- animals
- Animal Genetics and Breeding (LL240) (New March 2000)
- genetically engineered organisms
- eukaryotes
- Aquatic Biology and Ecology (MM300)
- Salmon
- aquatic organisms
- growth rate
- Genetic Engineering, Gene Transfer and Transgenics (WW100) (New June 2002)
- Chordata
- cecum
- Aquaculture (Animals) (MM120)
- transgenic animals
- genetically modified animals
- aquatic animals
- Salmonidae
- fishes
- Salmoniformes
- genetically engineered animals
- vertebrates
- somatotropin
- GMOs
- growth hormone
- feed intake