Genre
- Journal Article
Gill tissue was sampled from salmon (Salmo salar) that were transgenic for somatotropin and from non-transgenic control salmon. The transgenics were the F2 generation produced using eggs from a transgenic F1 female and milt from a non-transgenic male. At the time when the gill tissues were sampled, the transgenic salmon were growing 2.1 times more rapidly and their oxygen uptake rate was about 1.6 times greater than in controls. The gill surface area available for respiratory exchange in the transgenics was about 1.24 times that in the controls, which did not parallel the 1.6-fold increase in oxygen uptake. The increase in gill exchange area was due largely to a relatively uniform increase in the length of each gill filament.
Stevens, E. D.: Department of Zoology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1, Canada.
Accession Number: 19990105379. Publication Type: Journal Article. Language: English. Number of References: 16 ref. Registry Number: 9002-72-6. Subject Subsets: Animal Breeding; Agricultural Biotechnology
Source type: Electronic(1)
http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=lah&AN=19990105379&site=ehost-live
Language
- English
Subjects
- morphology
- animals
- Osteichthyes
- Salmo
- genetically engineered organisms
- oxygen consumption
- eukaryotes
- Aquatic Biology and Ecology (MM300)
- Salmon
- diadromous fishes
- Animal Physiology and Biochemistry (Excluding Nutrition) (LL600)
- aquatic organisms
- Salmo salar
- respiratory system
- Chordata
- Aquaculture (Animals) (MM120)
- transgenic animals
- Animal Genetics (LL220) (Discontinued March 2000)
- genetically modified animals
- morphometry
- aquatic animals
- Salmonidae
- fishes
- EGGS
- Atlantic salmon
- Salmoniformes
- genetically engineered animals
- Biotechnology (General) (WW000) (Revised June 2002) [Formerly Biotechnology]
- biotechnology
- vertebrates
- somatotropin
- GMOs
- gills
- growth hormone