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Compensation for hypercapnia by a euryhaline elasmobranch: effect of salinity and roles of gills and kidneys in fresh water
Authors:Choe Keith Patrick  Evans David H
Institution:Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611, USA. kchoe@zoo.ufl.edu
Abstract:Specimens of the euryhaline elasmobranch, Dasyatis sabina were acclimated to seawater and fresh water, and exposed to normocapnic (air) and hypercapnic (1% CO2 in air) environmental water. Blood pH, PCO2, and HCO3-], as well as whole-animal net-acid excretion, were measured for up to 24 h of hypercapnia. In a separate experimental series, urine was collected from freshwater acclimated stingrays during 8 h of normocapnia and hypercapnia. Stingrays in both salinities at least partially compensated for the respiratory acidosis by accumulating HCO3- in their extracellular spaces. The degree of compensation for blood pH was 88.5% in seawater, but only 31.0% in fresh water after 24 h of hypercapnia. Whole-animal net-acid excretion was also greater in seawater than in fresh water, as was the increase in extracellular fluid HCO3-]. Mean urinary net-acid excretion rates were slightly negative, and never increased above normocapnic control rates during hypercapnia. Since whole-animal net-acid excretion rates increased with blood HCO3-], and urinary excretion was always negative, the gills were probably the primary organ responsible for compensation from environmental hypercapnia. The faster, and more complete, compensation for hypercapnia in seawater than in fresh water for this euryhaline elasmobranch is consistent with data for euryhaline teleosts, and probably reflects Na+-dependent mechanisms of branchial acid excretion.
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