Journal
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY B-BIOCHEMICAL SYSTEMS AND ENVIRONMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 191, Issue 3, Pages 455-468Publisher
SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00360-021-01354-0
Keywords
Carbon dioxide; Bicarbonate; Ammonia excretion; Alanine-glucose cycle; Free amino acids; Crustaceans
Categories
Funding
- National Science and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) CGS-D
- University of Manitoba's Field Work Support Program
- NSERC [RGPIN/5013-2018]
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Emersion affects water-breathing animals’ ability to regulate respiratory gas exchange, acid-base balance, and nitrogenous waste excretion. Helice formosensis mitigates these effects by altering urine and branchial water, but prolonged emersion may result in overcompensatory metabolic alkalosis. During emersion, ammonia can be temporarily converted to alanine, indicating a unique adaptation mechanism in these crustaceans. Additionally, Helice formosensis can actively suppress desiccation by producing hyperosmotic urine.
Emersion limits water availability and impairs the gill function of water-breathing animals resulting in a reduced capacity to regulate respiratory gas exchange, acid-base balance, and nitrogenous waste excretion. Semi-terrestrial crustaceans such as Helice formosensis mitigate these physiological consequences by modifying and recycling urine and branchial water shifting some branchial workload to the antennal glands. To investigate how this process occurs, Helice formosensis were emersed for up to 160 h and their hemolymph and urinary acid-base, nitrogenous waste, free amino acids, and osmoregulatory parameters were investigated. Upon emersion, crabs experienced a respiratory acidosis that is restored by bicarbonate accumulation and ammonia reduction within the hemolymph and urine after 24 h. Prolonged emersion caused an overcompensatory metabolic alkalosis potentially limiting the crab's ability to remain emersed. During the alkalosis, hemolymph ammonia was maintained at control levels while urinary ammonia remained reduced by 60% of control values. During emersion, ammonia may be temporarily converted to alanine as part of the Cahill cycle until re-immersion where crabs can revert alanine to ammonia for excretion coinciding with the crabs' observed delayed ammonia excretion response. The presence of high hemolymph alanine concentrations even when immersed may indicate this cycle's use outside of emersion or in preparation for emersion. Furthermore, H. formosensis appears to be uniquely capable of actively suppressing its rate of desiccation in absence of behavioral changes, in part by creating hyperosmotic urine that mitigates evaporative water loss.
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