
doi: 10.1139/f78-162
Ammonia quotients (A.Q., ratio of ammonia excreted to oxygen consumed) were computed from data on daily-fed and starved sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka). In 22-d starved salmon, where a diel pulse in oxygen consumption, but not in ammonia excretion, persisted, the A.Q. was 0.125 at the prepulse stage (0.11 in fed fish); the lowest A.Q. was 0.06 (0.05 in fed fish) at peak oxygen consumption. The highest A.Q. of 0.24 was obtained in fed fish at the peak of ammonia output. Based on a theoretical estimate of an aerobic maximum A.Q. of 0.33, it is estimated that protein oxidation changes from 18 to 38% in starved sockeye and 15 to 73% in fed fish. The latter value is possibly an overestimate because of the involvement of nonoxidative protein breakdown, but this anaerobic involvement in routine metabolism of sockeye may be negligible. Key words: ammonia excretion, ammonia quotient, Oncorhynchus nerka, daily metabolic pattern, protein catabolism, starvation effect, energy utilization, nitrogen-excretion ratio, Rhinomugil corsula
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