Efficiency of gill and stomach breathing by Pterygoplichthys anisitsi
Posted: 31 Jan 2017, 07:26
da Cruz, A.L. & Fernandes, M.N. 2016. What is the most efficient respiratory organ for the loricariid air-breathing fish Pterygoplichthys anisitsi, gills or stomach? A quantitative morphological study. Zoology, December 2016, 119(6), 526-533.
http://0-www.sciencedirect.com.pacifica ... 0616300848
http://0-www.sciencedirect.com.pacifica ... 0616300848
da Cruz & Fernandes wrote:ABSTRACT
The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the morphometric respiratory potential of gills compared to the stomach in obtaining oxygen for aerobic metabolism in , a facultative air-breathing fish. The measurements were done using stereological methods. The gills showed greater total volume, volume-to-body mass ratio, potential surface area, and surface-to-volume ratio than the stomach. The water–blood diffusion barrier of the gills is thicker than the air–blood diffusion barrier of the stomach. Taken together, the surface area, the surface-to-volume ratio and the diffusion distance for O2 transfer from the respiratory medium to blood yield a greater diffusing capacity for gills than for the stomach, suggesting greater importance of aquatic respiration in this species. On the other hand, water breathing is energetically more expensive than breathing air. Under severe hypoxic conditions, O2 uptake by the stomach is more efficient than by the gills, although the stomach has a much lower diffusing capacity. Thus, P. anisitsi uses gills under normoxic conditions but the stomach may also support aerobic metabolism depending on environmental conditions.
- Keywords: Bimodal respiration; Morphometric partitioning; Respiratory surface; Oxygen availability