AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how four species of New Zealand triplefin fishes adapt to low oxygen availability in rock pools, comparing intertidal and subtidal species.
  • The intertidal species demonstrated lower critical oxygen tension but higher rates of oxygen consumption and metabolic scope, suggesting better adaptation to hypoxic conditions.
  • Key adaptations included higher blood oxygen-carrying capacity and enhanced gill structures, allowing intertidal species to thrive in oxygen-poor environments without reducing their resting metabolic rate.

Article Abstract

Decreased oxygen (O) availability (hypoxia) is common in rock pools and challenges the aerobic metabolism of fishes living in these habitats. In this study, the critical O tension (P), a whole animal measure of the aerobic contribution to hypoxia tolerance, was compared between four New Zealand triplefin fishes including an intertidal specialist (Bellapiscis medius), an occasional intertidal inhabitant (Forsterygion lapillum) and two exclusively subtidal species (F. varium and F. malcolmi). The intertidal species had lower P values than the subtidal species indicating traits to meet resting O demands at lower O tensions. While resting O demand (standard metabolic rate; SMR) did not show a major difference between species, the intertidal species had higher maximal rates of O consumption ([Formula: see text]) and higher aerobic metabolic scope (MS). The high O extractive capacity of the intertidal species was associated with increased blood O carrying capacity (i.e., higher Hb concentration), in addition to higher mass-specific gill surface area and thinner gill secondary lamellae that collectively conveyed a higher capacity for O flux across the gills. The specialist intertidal species B. medius also had higher glycogen stores in both white muscle and brain tissues, suggesting a greater potential to generate ATP anaerobically and survive in rock pools with O tensions less than P. Overall, this study shows that the superior P of intertidal triplefin species is not linked to a minimisation of SMR, but is instead associated with an increased O extractive capacity of the cardiorespiratory system (i.e., [Formula: see text], MS, Hb and gill O flux).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00360-019-01216-wDOI Listing

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