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Dive into the research topics where Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen is active.

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Featured researches published by Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2016

Sources of variation in oxygen consumption of aquatic animals demonstrated by simulated constant oxygen consumption and respirometers of different sizes

Morten Bo Søndergaard Svendsen; Peter G. Bushnell; Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen; John F. Steffensen

As intermittent-flow respirometry has become a common method for the determination of resting metabolism or standard metabolic rate (SMR), this study investigated how much of the variability seen in the experiments was due to measurement error. Experiments simulated different constant oxygen consumption rates (M˙O2 ) of a fish, by continuously injecting anoxic water into a respirometer, altering the injection rate to correct for the washout error. The effect of respirometer-to-fish volume ratio (RFR) on SMR measurement and variability was also investigated, using the simulated constant M˙O2 and the M˙O2 of seven roach Rutilus rutilus in respirometers of two different sizes. The results show that higher RFR increases measurement variability but does not change the mean SMR established using a double Gaussian fit. Further, the study demonstrates that the variation observed when determining oxygen consumption rates of fishes in systems with reasonable RFRs mainly comes from the animal, not from the measuring equipment.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Evaluating dispersal potential of an invasive fish by the use of aerobic scope and osmoregulation capacity

Jane Behrens; Mikael van Deurs; Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen

Non-indigenous species (NIS) can impact marine biodiversity and ecosystem structure and function. Once introduced into a new region, secondary dispersal is limited by the physiology of the organism in relation to the ambient environment and by complex interactions between a suite of ecological factors such as presence of predators, competitors, and parasites. Early prediction of dispersal potential and future ‘area of impact’ is challenging, but also a great asset in taking appropriate management actions. Aerobic scope (AS) in fish has been linked to various fitness-related parameters, and may be valuable in determining dispersal potential of aquatic invasive species in novel environments. Round goby, Neogobius melanostomus, one of the most wide-ranging invasive fish species in Europe and North America, currently thrives in brackish and fresh water, but its ability to survive in high salinity waters is unknown to date. We show that AS in round goby is reduced by 30% and blood plasma osmolality increased (indicating reduced capacity for osmoregulation) at salinities approaching oceanic conditions, following slow ramping (5 PSU per week) and subsequent long-term acclimation to salinities ranging between 0 and 30 PSU (8 days at final treatment salinities before blood plasma osmolality measurements, 12–20 additional days before respirometry). Survival was also reduced at the highest salinities yet a significant proportion (61%) of the fish survived at 30 PSU. Reduced physiological performance at the highest salinities may affect growth and competitive ability under oceanic conditions, but to what extent reduced AS and osmoregulatory capacity will slow the current 30 km year-1 rate of advance of the species through the steep salinity gradient from the brackish Baltic Sea and into the oceanic North Sea remains speculative. An unintended natural experiment is in progress to test whether the rate of advance slows down. At the current rate of advance the species will reach the oceanic North Sea by 2018/2019, therefore time for taking preventative action is short.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2017

Plasma osmolality and oxygen consumption of perchPerca fluviatilisin response to different salinities and temperatures: osmoregulation and MṀo2inp. fluviatilis

Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen; Morten Bo Søndergaard Svendsen; John F. Steffensen

The present study determined the blood plasma osmolality and oxygen consumption of the perch Perca fluviatilis at different salinities (0, 10 and 15) and temperatures (5, 10 and 20° C). Blood plasma osmolality increased with salinity at all temperatures. Standard metabolic rate (SMR) increased with salinity at 10 and 20° C. Maximum metabolic rate (MMR) and aerobic scope was lowest at salinity of 15 at 5° C, yet at 20° C, they were lowest at a salinity of 0. A cost of osmoregulation (SMR at a salinity of 0 and 15 compared with SMR at a salinity of 10) could only be detected at a salinity of 15 at 20° C, where it was 28%. The results show that P. fluviatilis have capacity to osmoregulate in hyper-osmotic environments. This contradicts previous studies and indicates intraspecific variability in osmoregulatory capabilities among P. fluviatilis populations or habitat origins. An apparent cost of osmoregulation (28%) at a salinity of 15 at 20° C indicates that the cost of osmoregulation in P. fluviatilis increases with temperature under hyperosmotic conditions and a power analysis showed that the cost of osmoregulation could be lower than 12·5% under other environmental conditions. The effect of salinity on MMR is possibly due to a reduction in gill permeability, initiated to reduce osmotic stress. An interaction between salinity and temperature on aerobic scope shows that high salinity habitats are energetically beneficial during warm periods (summer), whereas low salinity habitats are energetically beneficial during cold periods (winter). It is suggested, therefore, that the seasonal migrations of P. fluviatilis between brackish and fresh water is to select an environment that is optimal for metabolism and aerobic scope.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2018

Comparison of the organic matrix found in intestinal CaCO3 precipitates produced by several marine teleost species

Kevin L. Schauer; Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen; Martin Grosell

Marine bony fish poses the unique ability to hydrate from imbibed seawater. They accomplish this, in part, by the precipitation of inorganic carbonate mineral in their intestine, which lowers luminal osmotic pressure and allows for water uptake. It has recently been described that in the Gulf toadfish (Opsanus beta) this Ca(Mg)CO3 precipitation occurs under the regulation of an organic matrix. To date no investigations have aimed to determine if this phenomenon applies more generally to marine fish. Here, intestinally derived precipitates were collected from gray snapper (Lutjanus griseus), white grunt (Haemulon plumieri), European flounder (Platichthys flesus), as well as Gulf toadfish, and their matrices were extracted. The ability of these matrices to regulate CaCO3 production was determined using an in vitro calcification assay, which revealed that the matrix derived from each of the tested species increased precipitation at low concentrations, while inhibiting it at higher concentrations in full agreement with the earlier studies on toadfish. Matrix extracted from European flounder precipitates was then analyzed by mass spectrometry, leading to the identification of over 50 unique proteins. When the identities of these proteins were compared to previous investigation of toadfish precipitate matrix, nearly 35% were found to overlap between the flounder and toadfish analyses, suggesting conserved mechanisms of precipitation control. The effects of using different sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) solutions during precipitate purification on the resulting organic matrix are also discussed.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2018

Behavioural salinity preference of juvenile yellow perch Perca flavescens

Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen; Martin Grosell

The present study determined the behavioural salinity preference of a freshwater stock of juvenile yellow perch Perca flavescens acclimated to salinities of 0 and 10. The preferred salinities ranged between 7·3 and 13·0 (mean ± s.d. = 10·4 ± 1·7; n = 13) with no significant effect of acclimation salinity. The results showed that juvenile P. flavescens prefers near isoosmotic salinities, which could be due to a lowered energetic cost of osmoregulation.


Aquatic Biology | 2013

Marine spawning sites of perch Perca fluviatilis revealed by oviduct-inserted acoustic transmitters

Mikkel Skovrind; Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen; Henrik Carl; Lene Jacobsen; Peter Möller


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2018

Effects of salinity on swimming performance and oxygen consumption rate of shiner perch Cymatogaster aggregata

Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen; Björn Illing; Nina S. Iversen; Jacob L. Johansen; Paolo Domenici; John F. Steffensen


Sustainability | 2017

Will salinity hinder the ongoing northward dispersal of the invasive round goby into the oceanic North Sea

Jane Behrens; Mikael van Deurs; Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen


Conservation Physiology | 2017

To scale or not to scale: a perspective on describing fish energy budgeting

Morten Bo Søndergaard Svendsen; Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen; John F. Steffensen


Dansk Ferskvandssymposium 2016 | 2016

Aborrer og gedder i brakvand - betydningen af ferskvandsområder for gydning

Lene Jacobsen; Søren Berg; Christian Skov; Jan Nielsen; Kim Aarestrup; Niels Jepsen; Emil Aputsiaq Flindt Christensen; Mikkel Skovrind; Lasse Birch Højrup

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Jane Behrens

Technical University of Denmark

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Mikael van Deurs

Technical University of Denmark

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Lene Jacobsen

Technical University of Denmark

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Peter G. Bushnell

Indiana University South Bend

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Asbjørn Christensen

Technical University of Denmark

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