Physiological plasticity vs. inter-population variability: understanding drivers of hypoxia tolerance in a tropical estuarine fish

This data-set contains oxygen consumption and haematology data collected in a study on the acclimation potential of barramundi to low-oxygen (hypoxia) exposure. Fish were exposed to diel-cycling hypoxia for 0 (control), 8 or 16 days. Each individual fish was used only once throughout this trial, and thus all measurements are independent.

The full materials and methods are included in the related publication and as Chapter 3 of the author’s PhD thesis.

    Data Record Details
    Data record related to this publication Physiological plasticity vs. inter-population variability: understanding drivers of hypoxia tolerance in a tropical estuarine fish
    Data Publication title Physiological plasticity vs. inter-population variability: understanding drivers of hypoxia tolerance in a tropical estuarine fish
  • Description

    This data-set contains oxygen consumption and haematology data collected in a study on the acclimation potential of barramundi to low-oxygen (hypoxia) exposure. Fish were exposed to diel-cycling hypoxia for 0 (control), 8 or 16 days. Each individual fish was used only once throughout this trial, and thus all measurements are independent.

    The full materials and methods are included in the related publication and as Chapter 3 of the author’s PhD thesis.

  • Other Descriptors
    • Descriptor

      This dataset is available as a spreadsheet in MS Excel (.xlsx) and Open Document (.ods) formats.

    • Descriptor type Note
  • Data type dataset
  • Keywords
    • barramundi
    • hypoxia
    • oxygen
    • metabolism
    • respiration
    • blood
    • acclimation
  • Funding source
  • Research grant(s)/Scheme name(s)
  • Research themes
    Tropical Ecosystems, Conservation and Climate Change
    FoR Codes (*)
    SEO Codes
    Specify spatial or temporal setting of the data
    Temporal (time) coverage
  • Start Date 2013/12/01
  • End Date 2014/01/30
  • Time Period
    Spatial (location) coverage
  • Locations
    • Barramundi juveniles were obtained from commercial hatcheries located in Broome, WA and Gladstone, QLD. Experiments were conducted at the Marine and Aquaculture Research Facilities Unit, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia
    Data Locations

    Type Location Notes
    Physical Location Building 32, Room 018, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia
    Attachment E02_RESULTS.xlsx
    Attachment E02_RESULTS.ods Open Document (.ods) format
    The Data Manager is: Geoffrey Collins
    College or Centre
    Access conditions Open: free access under license
  • Alternative access conditions
  • Data record size 28 KB
  • Related publications
      Name Collins, Geoffrey Mark, Clark, Timothy Darren, and Carton, Alexander Guy (2016) Physiological plasticity v. inter-population variability: understanding drivers of hypoxia tolerance in a tropical estuarine fish. Marine and Freshwater Research, 67 (10). pp. 1575-1582.
    • URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/MF15046
    • Notes
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    • Notes
    Citation Collins, Geoffrey (2017): Physiological plasticity vs. inter-population variability: understanding drivers of hypoxia tolerance in a tropical estuarine fish. James Cook University. https://doi.org/10.4225/28/58c62cb87ebfd