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Using the swimbladder as a respiratory organ and/or a buoyancy structure-Benefits and consequences

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jez.2460

Keywords

aerial respiration; air‐ breathing fish; buoyancy; gills; ion regulation; respiration; swimbladder

Categories

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund [I12984-B25 P26363-25]
  2. INCT ADAPTA-CNPq x [465540/2014-7]
  3. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior [001]

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The swimbladder in fish is a special organ that helps reduce density and facilitate gas exchange. To adapt to breathing air, fish reduce gill surface area and undergo physiological adjustments, such as ion homeostasis and acid-base regulation. The swimbladder also requires gas secretion mechanisms and surfactant for proper function at different depths.
A swimbladder is a special organ present in several orders of Actinopterygians. As a gas-filled cavity it contributes to a reduction in overall density, but on descend from the water surface its contribution as a buoyancy device is very limited because the swimbladder is compressed by increasing hydrostatic pressure. It serves, however, as a very efficient organ for aerial gas exchange. To avoid the loss of oxygen to hypoxic water at the gills many air-breathing fish show a reduced gill surface area. This, in turn, also reduces surface area available for other functions, so that breathing air is connected to a number of physiological adjustments with respect to ion homeostasis, acid-base regulation and nitrogen excretion. Using the swimbladder as a buoyancy structure resulted in the loss of its function as an air-breathing organ and required the development of a gas secreting mechanism. This was achieved via the Root effect and a countercurrent arrangement of the blood supply to the swimbladder. In addition, a detachable air space with separated blood supply was necessary to allow the resorption of gas from the swimbladder. Gas secretion as well as gas resorption are slow phenomena, so that rapid changes in depth cannot instantaneously be compensated by appropriate volume changes. As gas-filled cavities the respiratory swimbladder and the buoyancy device require surfactant. Due to high oxygen partial pressures inside the bladder air-exposed tissues need an effective reactive oxygen species defense system, which is particularly important for a swimbladder at depth.

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