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The effects of water deprivation and salt load on water conservation efficiency in two Indian desert gerbils
Authors:T O Sasidharan  S P Goyal  Phool Chand  P K Ghosh
Institution:(1) Division of Animal Studies, Central Arid Zone Research Institute, 342 003 Jodhpur, India;(2) Present address: Central Sericultural Research and Training Institute, 570 008 Mysore, India;(3) Wildlife Institute of India, New Forest, 248006 Dehra Dun, India;(4) Field Unit, National Institute of Virology, 273015 Gorakhpur, India
Abstract:Summary The effects of water deprivation and intraperitoneal salt loading on urine volume and on various urinary constituents have been examined in two gerbil species of the Rajasthan desert, the Indian desert gerbil (Meriones hurrianae Jerdon) and the Indian gerbil (Tatera indica indica Hardwicke). During summer, hydratedT. indica excreted 0.782 ml urine·100 g-1·d-1 which was about 60.5% higher than the volume of urine excreted by hydratedM. hurrianae (0.487 ml·100 g-1·d-1). During winter, both species excreted around 1.5 ml urine ·100 g-1·d-1. The experimental treatments caused reductions in urine volume inM. hurrianae from 40 to 76% during summer and from 35 to 71% in winter. Similar treatments inT. indica caused reductions in urine volume of 50–82% in summer and 5–60% in winter. The mean increase in urine osmolarity following various salt loading treatments inT. indica ranged from 3800 to 5761 mosmol·l-1 and from 4034 to 6255 mosmol·l-1 during summer and winter, respectively. The mean values of urine osmolarity for hydratedT. indica were 2831 and 3189 mosmol·l-1 during summer and winter, respectively. InM. hurrianae salt loading treatments caused increases of urine osmolarity between 3381 and 5646 mosmol·l-1 and between 4032 and 5434 mosmol· l-1, during summer and winter, respectively, over the values recorded for hydrated animals (summer=3292; winter=3294 mosmol·l-1). A maximum urine osmolarity of around 7000 mosmol·l-1 was found in both species when subjected to 2% salt-loading treatment. The treatments used in this study increased urinary urea level in bothT. indica (3039–4056 mM) and inM. hurrianae (1900–2180 mM) compared to the level in their respective hydrated controls (T. indica=1628 mM;M. hurrianae=1372 mM). The results indicate thatT. indica may be better adapted to produce more concentrated urine thanM. hurrianae.
Keywords:Desert gerbils  Water conservation  Water deprivation  Salt load  Kidney function
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