JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. . Wiley and Nordic Society Oikos are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Ornis Scandinavica. M. 1992. Adjustments of the prebasic molt schedule in birds. -Ornis Scand. 23: 314-321.Prebasic molt and reproduction are largely mutually exclusive events in many species, but there may be varying degrees of overlap. There appear to be two extremes of overlap in molt and breeding schedules: 1. Breeding and prebasic molt are separate temporal events and overlap is minimal. Usually the molt is rapid and both flight and thermoregulation may be impaired. 2. Breeding and prebasic molt show complete or partial overlap. In these cases molt is usually slow and neither flight nor thermoregulatory capacity is greatly impaired. The molt may increase in rate, however, once breeding has ceased. In both scenarios, the prebasic molt schedule can be regulated markedly. In the first instance, prolonged breeding may delay or, conversely, failure to breed may speed up onset of molt. In the second case, initiation of molt may not be affected but the rate can be adjusted accordingly. We present here a classification of possible environmental factors that may potentially influence onset and rate of molt. We then outline recent work showing that one mechanism of molt-delay involves inhibition by sex steroid hormones. Further, treatment with thyroxine can overide the inhibitory effects of testosterone suggesting that androgens delay molt by suppressing the secretion of thyroid hormones.
We conducted large-scale production trials in Seward, Alaska, USA to investigate effects of dietary astaxanthin supplementation on survival, growth and shell colouration of recently settled juvenile (C1-C4) red king crabs (Paralithodes camtschaticus). We supplemented a control diet of commercial crustacean feeds with astaxanthin, and fed these diets to juvenile king crabs at densities of 2000 and 4000 crabs m À2 for 56 days. We assessed survival and growth by counting crabs and individually measuring carapace width and weighing crabs at the start and end of the experiment, and quantified crab colour (hue, saturation, brightness) in digital photographs. Diets containing astaxanthin had higher survival, suggesting that astaxanthin may provide nutritional or immune system benefits. Crabs had lower hue, higher saturation and lower brightness values when fed diets containing astaxanthin, suggesting that red king crab colouration is plastic and responds to diet. Astaxanthin is likely an important dietary component for hatchery or laboratory reared red king crab juveniles, and should be considered for aquaculture and other rearing of this and possibly other crustacean species.
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