| Literature DB >> 31630483 |
Christian Damsgaard1, Vikram B Baliga1, Eric Bates2, Warren Burggren3, David J McKenzie4, Edwin Taylor5, Patricia A Wright6.
Abstract
Air-breathing and amphibious fishes are essential study organisms to shed insight into the required physiological shifts that supported the full transition from aquatic water-breathing fishes to terrestrial air-breathing tetrapods. While the origin of air-breathing in the evolutionary history of the tetrapods has received considerable focus, much less is known about the evolutionary physiology of air-breathing among fishes. This review summarizes recent advances within the field with specific emphasis on the cardiorespiratory regulation associated with air-breathing and terrestrial excursions, and how respiratory physiology of these living transitional forms are affected by development and personality. Finally, we provide a detailed and re-evaluated model of the evolution of air-breathing among fishes that serves as a framework for addressing new questions on the cardiorespiratory changes associated with it. This review highlights the importance of combining detailed studies on piscine air-breathing model species with comparative multi-species studies, to add an additional dimension to our understanding of the evolutionary physiology of air-breathing in vertebrates.Entities:
Keywords: development; evolution; phenotypic plasticity; terrestrialization; water-to-air transition
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31630483 DOI: 10.1111/apha.13406
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Physiol (Oxf) ISSN: 1748-1708 Impact factor: 6.311