4.5 Article

The hygric hypothesis does not hold water:: abolition of discontinuous gas exchange cycles does not affect water loss in the ant Camponotus vicinus

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 211, Issue 4, Pages 563-567

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.010041

Keywords

discontinuous gas exchange; DGC; insect respiration; respiratory water loss

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The discontinuous gas exchange cycle (DGC) of insects and other tracheate arthropods temporally decouples oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide emission and generates powerful concentration gradients for both gas species between the outside world and the tracheal system. Although the DGC is considered an adaptation to reduce respiratory water loss (RWL) - the 'hygric hypothesis' - it is absent from many taxa, including xeric ones. The 'chthonic hypothesis' states that the DGC originated as an adaptation to gas exchange in hypoxic and hypercapnic, i.e. underground, environments. If that is the case then the DGC is not the ancestral condition, and its expression is not necessarily a requirement for reducing RWL. Here we report a study of water loss rate in the ant Camponotus vicinus, measured while its DGC was slowly eliminated by gradual hypoxia (hypoxic ramp de-DGCing). Metabolic rate remained constant. The DGC ceased at a mean P-O2 of 8.4 kPa. RWL in the absence of DGCs was not affected until P-O2 declined below 3.9 kPa. Below that value, non-DGC spiracular regulation failed, accompanied by a large increase in RWL. Thus, the spiracular control strategy of the DGC is not required for low RWL, even in animals that normally express the DGC.

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