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    Obligatory urea production and the cost of living in the Magadi tilapia revealed by acclimation to reduced salinity and alkalinity

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    Date
    2002
    Author
    Wood, Chris M
    Wilson, Paul
    Bergman, Harold L
    Bergman, Annie N
    Laurent, Pierre
    Otiang’a‐Owiti, George
    Walsh, Patrick J
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Alcolapia grahami is a unique ureotelic tilapia that lives in the highly alkaline, saline Lake Magadi, Kenya (pH, approximately 10.0; alkalinity, approximately 380 mmol L(-1); Na(+), approximately 350 mmol L(-1); Cl(-), approximately 110 mmol L(-1); osmolality, approximately 580 mosm kg(-1)). The fish survived well upon gradual exposure to dilute lake water (down to 1%, essentially freshwater). Urea excretion continued, and there was no ammonia excretion despite favorable conditions, indicating that ureotelism is obligatory. Levels of most ornithine-urea cycle enzymes in the liver were unchanged relative to controls kept for the same period in 100% lake water. The fish exhibited good abilities for hypo- and hyperregulation, maintaining plasma Na(+), Cl(-), and osmolality at levels typical of marine and freshwater teleosts in 100% and 1% lake water, respectively. Plasma total CO(2) did not change with environmental dilution. Routine oxygen consumption (Mo(2)) was extremely high in 100% lake water but decreased by 40%-68% after acclimation to dilute lake water. At every fixed swimming speed, Mo(2) was significantly reduced (by 50% at high speeds), and critical swimming speed was elevated in fish in 10% lake water relative to 100% lake water. Osmotic and Cl(-) concentration gradients from water to plasma were actually increased, and osmotic and Na(+) gradients were reversed, in 10% and 1% dilutions relative to 100% lake water, whereas acid-base gradients were greatly reduced. We suggest that approximately 50% of the animal's high metabolic demand originates from the cost of acid-base regulation in the highly alkaline Lake Magadi. When this load is reduced by environmental dilution, the energy saved can be diverted to enhanced swimming performance.
    URI
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12024287
    http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/54260
    Citation
    Wood CM, Wilson P, Bergman HL, Bergman AN, Laurent P, Otiang'a-Owiti G and Walsh PJ. (2002). Obligatory urea production and the cost of living in the Magadi tilapia revealed by acclimation to reduced salinity and alkalinity. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology Vol. 75, No. 2 , pp. 111-122
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    • Faculty of Agriculture & Veterinary Medicine (FAg / FVM) [5481]

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