TL;DR: In migrating eels gonad development, gonadotropin hormone (GTH-II) production and increase of eye surface were similar at all sites, and fin length and gut regression may indicate the time since an eel started its migration.
Abstract: The identification of five stages for female and two stages for male eels Anguilla anguilla using multivariate analysis was carried out on a large sample of individuals collected at six different locations in France. Stages corresponded to a growth phase (stages I and II), a pre-migrant phase (III) and two migrating phases (IV and V). It is likely that an important period of growth triggered silvering through the production of growth hormone (GH) in stage III eels. In migrating eels gonad development, gonadotropin hormone (GTH-II) production and increase of eye surface were similar at all sites. Differences among locations were found in gut regression and pectoral fin length. As variability for these increased with the size of the watershed and values were highest for the most downstream locations, fin length and gut regression may indicate the time since an eel started its migration.
TL;DR: Generational Intelligence as discussed by the authors is an intellectual tour de force bringing together contemporary trends and challenges with a new framing concept, and it is highly engaging and generally readable, with a clear voice throughout with a sharply articulated message, though that message might have been expressed more clearly and completely in the concluding chapter.
Abstract: That said, Generational Intelligence is not only an intellectual tour de force bringing together contemporary trends and challenges with a new framing concept, it is highly engaging and generally readable. It has a clear voice throughout with a sharply articulated message, even though that message might have been expressed more clearly and completely in the concluding chapter. The book primarily makes a theoretical or conceptual contribution with considerable possibility for personal and societal application, although with a little less application to policy. It is a book that could be of interest to many scholars in gerontology, social work, sociology, and psychology, and could be used as a supplemental text in upper-level courses in these fi elds. It is also of interest to researchers struggling to frame longitudinal research with an intergenerational lens.
TL;DR: The main energetic stores at the silver eel stage were studied by analysing muscle fat concentrations and hepatosomatic indices in female silver eels from various habitats in Sweden and it was concluded that silvering and the spawning migration may begin also at low musclefat concentrations.
Abstract: The main energetic stores at the silver eel stage were studied by analysing muscle fat concentrations and hepatosomatic indices in female silver eels from various habitats in Sweden. Muscle fat concentrations varied both within and between localities and lean eels with muscle fat concentrations <20% occurred at all study sites. Furthermore, no correlation could be found between muscle fat content and internal or external maturation indices, neither was the relative liver size related to the maturation process, as the correlation between the hepatosomatic and gonadosomatic indices was very weak. Consequently, it was concluded that silvering and the spawning migration may begin also at low muscle fat concentrations. However, most of the energy reserve is stored as muscle fat in eel, and it is highly unlikely that female silver eels with such low fat contents, as were observed occasionally in this study, will ever recruit to the next generation. Therefore, it is suggested that the maturation process in eel is more flexible than previously recognized, and that this process might be temporarily arrested and feeding resumed during the first part of the migratory phase.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that silvering in eels is under endocrine control and that the presumed male-specific steroid 11-KT is capable of inducing silvering-related changes in a female teleost.
Abstract: The developmental transition from a residential, immature 'yellow' eel to a migratory, maturing adult 'silver' eel is accompanied by many morphological changes that appear to be under endocrine control. High circulating levels of the teleost, and usually male-specific, androgen 11-ketotestosterone (11-KT) are found in migrating female short-finned eels, Anguilla australis. We examined the role of this steroid in silvering by implanting immature, female short-finned eels either with blank vehicles or with vehicles containing 11-KT. Six weeks after they had received the implants, eels treated with 11-KT had developed 'chisel-shaped' snouts and black pectoral fins with tapered ends, and the size of their eyes had increased significantly. 11-KT treated eels had a thicker dermis than control eels and an epidermis with fewer or no mucous cells. Ventricular mass at the end of the experiment was two-fold larger than in control eels. 11-KT treated eels also had larger livers and gonads. Ovaries contained predominantly cortical alveolus stage III oocytes, as opposed to the smaller gonads of control eels containing previtellogenic stage II oocytes. All of these changes correspond to changes during the developmental transition from yellow to silver eels in the wild. This demonstrates that silvering in eels is under endocrine control and that the presumed male-specific steroid 11-KT is capable of inducing silvering-related changes in a female teleost. We discuss how species-specific responses to 11-KT may differ depending on tissue-specific androgen receptor abundance and how a dual demand on liver function can explain the apparently positive effects of 11-KT on liver growth.
TL;DR: Hormonal profiles and experimental data lead to the conclusion that eel silvering should be considered as an onset of puberty rather than a ‘genuine’ metamorphosis.
Abstract: Silvering (transition from yellow to silver eel) has been traditionally considered as a metamorphosis in view of the numerous morphological, physiological and behavioral changes preparing the eel for