The review addresses different types of dormancy on fish. It can be
subdivided into two groups. The first is adult aestivation. This allows
fish to survive droughts in low latitude freshwater environments
(several species from various families), or ice coverage periods causing
anoxic conditions in high latitudes (cyprinid Carassius spp.). It is a
facultative phenomenon induced by various environmental cues (but not
photoperiods), accompanied by specific biochemical adaptations that slow
down the metabolism of aestivating individuals and allow their bodies to
tolerate pollution from metabolic waste products. The second, more
variable group is embryonic diapauses. These obligatory processes are
well-integrated into the life cycle of fishes. It occurs in more than 30
killifish species (order Cyprinodontiformes) as a key adaptation that
significantly expands their environmental range to include ephemeral
pools. Diapause in several elasmobranch species occurs in the mother's
body. In bitterling Acheilognathus, diapause is a key adaptation to
effectively use their limiting resource-the large bivalves where
bitterlings deposit their eggs. Cessation of female gonad development
after completing vitellogenesis is common in many species of high
latitudes. This phenomenon has not been considered in the context of
fish dormancy before, but biologically it fulfills the same functions as
embryonic diapause and thus should be considered within the same
framework. The effectiveness of life strategies containing diapause
depends very much on both the sensitivity of dormant organisms to
environmental stresses and the accuracy of their responses to
environmental cues-primary changes in photoperiod or temperature to
induce or terminate dormancy. The optimal strategy should balance
phenotypic plasticity and bet-hedging as tools to maximize the fitness
of diapausing organisms in partially predicted environments.