Thiamine status of whitefish (Coregonus maraena) in the Baltic Sea
Marc M. Hauber, Oscar Nordahl, Vittoria Todisco, Emil Fridolfsson, Petter Tibblin, Samuel Hylander, Amel El Asely, Amel El Asely, Amel El Asely

TL;DR
This study investigates whether whitefish in the Baltic Sea suffer from thiamine deficiency, finding no evidence of it and linking thiamine levels to physiological and feeding traits.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into thiamine status in whitefish populations and links it to physiological and morphological traits.
Findings
Whitefish populations in the Baltic Sea show no evidence of thiamine deficiency based on enzyme latency and egg concentrations.
Thiamine concentrations vary by tissue and sex, with higher levels in liver than muscle and sex-specific allocation patterns.
Thiamine levels correlate with female condition and feeding niche traits like gill raker length.
Abstract
Many coregonine species have declined drastically across the Northern Hemisphere, including populations of Coregonus maraena (whitefish) in the Baltic Sea, and the mechanisms leading to these declines are not well investigated. An abrupt population crash occurred in the 1990s, coinciding with heavy declines in salmonid recruitment, also known as thiamine deficiency syndrome. Thiamine, i.e., vitamin B1, is an essential micronutrient needed for a functional metabolism. Offspring with thiamine deficiency have a high mortality posing significant negative impact on populations. Here, we aim to determine if whitefish, like other salmonids in the Baltic Sea, is affected by thiamine deficiency. Anadromous whitefish were therefore sampled during spawning in rivers of Southeastern Sweden, and we compared tissue concentrations and thiamine-dependent enzyme latencies to published thresholds.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAlcoholism and Thiamine Deficiency · Folate and B Vitamins Research · Aquaculture Nutrition and Growth
