4.7 Article

Housing Conditions Affect Adult Zebrafish (Danio rerio) Behavior but Not Their Physiological Status

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani13061120

Keywords

zebrafish; environmental enrichment; cortisol; behavior; skin mucus; welfare

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Proper housing conditions are important for fish welfare. This study found that environmentally enriched housing conditions had minor effects on zebrafish behavior, but no significant influence on body length and stress hormone levels. It suggests that housing conditions should be considered in future research.
Simple Summary The delivery of proper housing conditions may translate into good fish welfare. As zebrafish housing is usually poorly enriched, the fish could be unable to express some natural behaviors, leading to distress and/or stress mechanism dysregulation. This work focused on the examination of zebrafish welfare raised under different housing conditions (barren or environmentally enriched) and the testing of a low-invasive technique (skin mucus collection) to measure the main stress hormone (cortisol). The data were processed to assess body length, behavior, and physiological status. The results revealed that enrichment induced minor alterations in zebrafish behavior. Thus, the influence of housing conditions should be considered in future research, depending on the purpose of the study. In addition, skin mucus appears to be a promising matrix to replace the whole-body measurement of cortisol in zebrafish, since its collection is nonlethal and showed similar results to the traditional method. Zebrafish is a valuable model for neuroscience research, but the housing conditions to which it is exposed daily may be impairing its welfare status. The use of environmental enrichment and the refinement of methodology for cortisol measurement could reduce stress, improving its welfare and its suitability as an animal model used in stress research. Thus, this study aimed to evaluate (I) the influence of different housing conditions on zebrafish physiology and behavior, and (II) skin mucus potential for cortisol measurement in adult zebrafish. For this, AB zebrafish were raised under barren or enriched (PVC pipes and gravel image) environmental conditions. After 6 months, their behavior was assessed by different behavioral paradigms (shoaling, white-black box test, and novel tank). The physiological response was also evaluated through cortisol levels (whole-body homogenates and skin mucus) and brain oxidative stress markers. The results revealed that enriched-housed fish had an increased nearest neighbors' distance and reduced activity. However, no effect on body length or stress biomarkers was observed; whole-body and skin mucus cortisol levels had the same profile between groups. In conclusion, this study highlights the skin mucus potential as a matrix for cortisol quantification, and how housing conditions could influence the data in future studies.

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