PhD students

PhD students within the research area Fish Biology.

Alexander RosénAlexander Rosén

Title of PhD project

Growth and metabolic scaling of fish: unravelling how variation in growth affects metabolic scaling

Supervisors

Tommy Norin and Ken Haste Andersen

Background of project

Metabolic rate scales with body size, but usually out of proportion, meaning that for a given increase in body mass, metabolic rate usually increases less. This means that larger animals are more efficient, and 1 kg of mouse thus uses magnitudes more energy than 1 kg elephant. This scaling is not constant and there is substantial variation among taxa and taxonomic level. Precisely why it is so, and particularly why there is variation in this metabolic scaling relationship between individual, species and groups of species are some of the biggest unanswered questions in biology.

About the project

The goal of the project is to test a novel hypothesis that metabolic scaling is governed by growth and that variation in selection pressures on fast early-life growth courses the variation in metabolic scaling. This will be tested using both a multigenerational selection study where zebrafish will be breed for high or low growth rates and during a comparative study examining different fish species with varying levels of early growth rates. Metabolic rate will be measured with respirometry. 

Perspective

This project is expected to produce new and fundamental knowledge about metabolic scaling and why it varies both in individuals, between individual, between species and species groups. These findings would translate into a better understanding of the energetics of animals and low evolution affects this. In addition, it can help predict how animals will be respond to new selection pressures such as climate change and overharvesting.

 

Previous PhD students (since 2020)


Kasun Anuruddha Bandara

Marine larval hatchery technology: Microbial management and immune system ontogeny in European eel
Go to DTU Orbit to download thesis

Elisa Benini

European eel larval quality and feeding regime: Establishing first-feeding culture
Go to DTU Orbit to download thesis

Marie Plambech Ryberg

Eastern Baltic cod infected with Contracaecum osculatum: physiological mechanisms and the importance of monitoring infection loads
Go to DTU Orbit to download thesis

Michelle Jørgensen

Reproductive physiology of female European eel
Go to DTU Orbit to download thesis

Johanna S. Kottmann

Egg Quality and Offspring Performance in European Eel
Go to DTU Orbit to download thesis

 

 

https://www.aqua.dtu.dk/english/research/fish-biology/phd-students
25 APRIL 2024