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Ionoregulatory strategies and the role of urea in...
Journal article

Ionoregulatory strategies and the role of urea in the Magadi tilapia (Alcolapia grahami)

Abstract

The unique ureotelic tilapia Alcolapia grahami lives in the highly alkaline and saline waters of Lake Magadi, Kenya (pH ~10.0, alkalinity ~380 mmol·L –1 , Na + ~350 mmol·L –1 , Cl – ~110 mmol·L –1 , osmolality ~580 mosmol·kg –1 ). In 100% lake water, the Magadi tilapia maintained plasma Na + , Cl – , and osmolality at levels typical of marine teleosts and drank the medium at 8.01 ± 1.29 mL·kg –1 ·h –1 . Gill chloride cells were predominantly of the sea water type (recessed, with apical pits) but a few freshwater-type chloride cells (surficial, with flat apical exposure) were also present. Whole-body Na + and Cl – concentrations were relatively high and exhibited larger relative changes in response to salinity transfers than did plasma ions. All fish succumbed upon acute transfer to 1% lake water, but tolerated acute transfer to 10% lake water well, and gradual long-term acclimation to both 10 and 1% lake water without change in plasma cortisol. Plasma osmolytes were here maintained at levels typical of freshwater teleosts. Curiously, drinking continued at the same rate in fish adapted to 1% lake water, but chloride cells were now exclusively of the freshwater type. Significant mortality and elevated cortisol occurred after acute transfer to 200% lake water. However, the fish survived well during gradual adaptation to 200% lake water, although plasma cortisol remained chronically elevated. Urea levels accounted for only 2–3% of internal osmolality in 100% lake water but responded to a greater extent than plasma ions during exposure to 10 and 200% lake water, decreasing by 28–42% in the former and increasing by over 500% in the latter relative to simultaneous-control values. Urea thereby played a small but significant role (up to 8% of internal osmolality) in osmoregulation.

Authors

Wood CM; Wilson P; Bergman HL; Bergman AN; Laurent P; Otiang'a-Owiti G; Walsh PJ

Journal

Canadian Journal of Zoology, Vol. 80, No. 3, pp. 503–515

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Publication Date

March 1, 2002

DOI

10.1139/z02-019

ISSN

0008-4301

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