Literature DB >> 29189935

The physiology of the Tambaqui (Colossoma macropomum) at pH 8.0.

Chris M Wood1,2,3,4, R J Gonzalez5, Márcio Soares Ferreira6, Susana Braz-Mota6, Adalberto Luis Val6.   

Abstract

The Tambaqui is a model neotropical teleost which is of great economic and cultural importance in artisanal fisheries and commercial aquaculture. It thrives in ion-poor, often acidic Amazonian waters and exhibits excellent regulation of physiology down to water pH 4.0. Curiously, however, it is reported to perform poorly in aquaculture at pH 8.0, an only slightly alkaline pH which would be benign for most freshwater fish. In initial experiments with Tambaqui of intermediate size (30-50 g), we found that ammonia excretion rate was unchanged at pH 4, 5, 6, and 7, but elevated after 20-24 h at pH 8, exactly opposite the pattern seen in most teleosts. Subsequent experiments with large Tambaqui (150-300 g) demonstrated that only ammonia, and not urea excretion was increased at pH 8.0, and that the elevation was proportional to a general increase in MO2. There was an accompanying elevation in net acidic equivalent excretion and/or basic equivalent uptake which occurred mainly at the gills. Net Na+ balance was little affected while Cl- balance became negative, implicating a disturbance of Cl- versus base exchange rather than Na+ versus acid exchange. Arterial blood pH increased by 0.2 units at pH 8.0, reflecting combined metabolic and respiratory alkaloses. Most parameters recovered to control levels by 18-24 h after return to pH 6.0. With respect to large Tambaqui, we conclude that a physiology adapted to acidic pH performs inappropriately at moderately alkaline pH. In small Tambaqui (4-15 g), the responses were very different, with an initial inhibition of ammonia excretion rate at pH 8.0 followed by a subsequent restoration of control levels. Elevated ammonia excretion rate occurred only after return to pH 6.0. Furthermore, MO2, plasma cortisol, and branchial vH+ATPase activities all declined during pH 8.0 exposure in small Tambaqui, in contrast to the responses in larger fish. Overall, small Tambaqui appear to cope better at pH 8.0, a difference that may correlate with their natural history in the wild.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Acid–base regulation; Alkalinity; Ammonia; Ionoregulation; Nitrogen quotient; Oxygen consumption; Urea

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Year:  2017        PMID: 29189935     DOI: 10.1007/s00360-017-1137-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Physiol B        ISSN: 0174-1578            Impact factor:   2.200


  49 in total

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Authors:  M P Wilkie; P Laurent; C M Wood
Journal:  Physiol Biochem Zool       Date:  1999 May-Jun       Impact factor: 2.247

2.  Ion and acid-base balance in three species of Amazonian fish during gradual acidification of extremely soft water.

Authors:  R W Wilson; C M Wood; R J Gonzalez; M L Patrick; H L Bergman; A Narahara; A L Val
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Authors:  Yusuke Kumai; Steve F Perry
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Review 5.  Freshwater fish gill ion transport: August Krogh to morpholinos and microprobes.

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8.  Ionoregulatory Aspects of the Osmorespiratory Compromise during Acute Environmental Hypoxia in 12 Tropical and Temperate Teleosts.

Authors:  Lisa M Robertson; Adalberto Luis Val; Vera F Almeida-Val; Chris M Wood
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Review 9.  Ammonia excretion and urea handling by fish gills: present understanding and future research challenges.

Authors:  Michael Patrick Wilkie
Journal:  J Exp Zool       Date:  2002-08-01

10.  Close Association of Carbonic Anhydrase (CA2a and CA15a), Na(+)/H(+) Exchanger (Nhe3b), and Ammonia Transporter Rhcg1 in Zebrafish Ionocytes Responsible for Na(+) Uptake.

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  1 in total

1.  High Temperature, pH, and Hypoxia Cause Oxidative Stress and Impair the Spermatic Performance of the Amazon Fish Colossoma macropomum.

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  1 in total

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