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The osmorespiratory compromise in the euryhaline killifish: water regulation during hypoxia

Wood, C. M.; Ruhr, I. M.; Schauer, K.L.; Wang, Y.; Mager, E.M.; McDonald, M.D.; Stanton, B.A.; Grosell, M.

Authors

C. M. Wood

K.L. Schauer

Y. Wang

E.M. Mager

M.D. McDonald

B.A. Stanton

M. Grosell



Abstract

Freshwater- and seawater-acclimated Fundulus heteroclitus were exposed to acute hypoxia (10% air saturation, 3 h), followed by normoxic recovery (3 h). In both salinities, ventilation increased and heart rate fell in the classic manner, while ṀO2 initially declined by ∼50%, with partial restoration by 3 h of hypoxia, and no O2 debt repayment during recovery. Gill paracellular permeability (measured with [14C] PEG-4000) was 1.4-fold higher in seawater, and declined by 50% during hypoxia with post-exposure overshoot to 188%. A similar pattern with smaller changes occurred in freshwater. Drinking rate (also measured with [14C] PEG-4000) was 8-fold higher in seawater fish, but declined by ∼90% during hypoxia in both groups, with post-exposure overshoots to ∼270%. Gill diffusive water flux (measured with 3H2O) was 1.9-fold higher in freshwater fish, and exhibited a ∼35% decrease during hypoxia, which persisted throughout recovery, but was unchanged during hypoxia in seawater fish. Nevertheless, freshwater killifish gained mass while seawater fish lost mass during hypoxia, and these changes were not corrected during normoxic recovery. We conclude that this hypoxia-tolerant teleost beneficially reduces gill water permeability in a salinity-dependent fashion during hypoxia, despite attempting to simultaneously improve ṀO2, but nevertheless incurs a net water balance penalty in both freshwater and seawater.

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Aug 27, 2019
Publication Date 2019-09
Deposit Date Jun 11, 2025
Journal Journal of Experimental Biology
Print ISSN 0022-0949
Electronic ISSN 1477-9145
Publisher Company of Biologists
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 222
Issue 18
Article Number jeb204818
DOI https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.204818