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Respiratory Adaptations in Intertidal Fish
Authors:BRIDGES  CHRISTOPHER ROBERT
Institution:Institute for Zoology IV, University of Düsseldorf D-4000 Düsseldorf, FRG
Abstract:SYNOPSIS: Intertidal rockpools provide a challenging environmentfor rockpool fish with rapid changes taking place in many environmentalparameters over a tidal cycle. Intertidal fish exhibit a numberof behavioural adaptations such as the avoidance of hypoxicsituations or remaining inactive during aerial "stranding."Other species are, however, well adapted to breathe air andexhibit morphological adaptations such as smaller gill areas,specialized buccopharyngeal epithelia and a proliferation ofcutaneous blood vessels in the skin. Oxygen consumption in rockpoolfish is comparable to non-intertidal fish and responds in asimilar manner to temperature changes. The ability to regulateoxygen consumption down to oxygen tensions below 40 Torr is,however, marked in rockpool species. Aerial and aquatic ratesof respiration are similar in those species which are able tobreathe air and the respiratory quotient normally remains between0.7 and 0.9. A number of intertidal fish are well adapted forcutaneous respiration, satisfying over half of their oxygenand carbon dioxide exchange through the skin. Ventilatory responsesto increased temperature, hyperoxia and hypoxia are similarto those of other fish but cardiac responses may differ in thatno change in heart rate is seen under hypoxia or hyperoxia.Ventilatory and cardiac responses to aerial respiration arewell adapted in some species maintaining ventilation and perfusionduring aerial exposure. A marked Bohr effect, low temperaturesensitivity and a temperature dependent Haldane effect havebeen measured in the haemoglobolin of some intertidal fish.These properties may assist oxygen transport and carbon dioxideexchange during cyclical changes in environmental parameterswithin an intertidal rockpool.
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