4.4 Article

Environmental modulation of the onset of air breathing and survival of Betta splendens and Trichopodus trichopterus

Journal

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY
Volume 84, Issue 3, Pages 794-807

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jfb.12322

Keywords

hypoxia; heterokairy; developmental plasticity

Funding

  1. NSF [IOS-1025823, IOS-0942287]
  2. Programa de Mejoramiento del Profesorado (PROMEP Mexico) [103.5/09/4407]
  3. Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Mexico folio [UAEMEX-127]
  4. University of North Texas Toulouse Graduate School Dissertation Fellowship

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The effect of hypoxia on air-breathing onset and survival was determined in larvae of the air-breathing fishes, the three spot gourami Trichopodus trichopterus and the Siamese fighting fish Betta splendens. Larvae were exposed continuously or intermittently (12 h nightly) to an oxygen partial pressure (PO2) of 20, 17 and 14 kPa from 1 to 40 days post-fertilization (dpf). Survival and onset of air breathing were measured daily. Continuous normoxic conditions produced a larval survival rate of 65-75% for B. splendens and 15-30% for T. trichopterus, but all larvae of both species died at 9 dpf in continuous hypoxia conditions. Larvae under intermittent (nocturnal) hypoxia showed a 15% elevated survival rate in both species. The same conditions altered the onset of air breathing, advancing onset by 4 days in B. splendens and delaying onset by 9 days in T. trichopterus. These interspecific differences were attributed to air-breathing characteristics: B. splendens was a non-obligatory air breather after 36 dpf, whereas T. trichopterus was an obligatory air breather after 32 dpf.

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