Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16712
Title: Does dissolved organic carbon from Amazon black water (Brazil) help a native species, the tambaqui Colossoma macropomum to maintain ionic homeostasis in acidic water?
Authors: Sadauskas-Henrique, Helen
Wood, Chris M.
Souza-Bastos, Luciana Rodrigues
Duarte, Rafael Mendonça
Smith, Donald Scott
Val, Adalberto Luis
Keywords: Ammonia
Carbon
Ion
Sodium
Water
Animals
Characiformes
Chemistry
Gill
Homeostasis
Metabolism
Physiology
Ammonia
Animal
Carbon
Characiformes
Gills
Homeostasis
Ions
Sodium
Water
Issue Date: 2019
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Journal of Fish Biology
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 94, Número 4, Pags. 595-605
Abstract: To assess how the quality and properties of the natural dissolved organic carbon (DOC) could drive different effects on gill physiology, we analysed the ionoregulatory responses of a native Amazonian fish species, the tambaqui Colossoma macropomum, to the presence of dissolved organic carbon (DOC; 10 mg l −1 ) at both pH 7.0 and pH 4.0 in ion-poor water. The DOC was isolated from black water from São Gabriel da Cachoeira (SGC) in the upper Rio Negro of the Amazon (Brazil) that earlier been shown to protect a non-native species, zebrafish Danio rerio against low pH under similar conditions. Transepithelial potential (TEP), net flux rates of Na + , Cl − and ammonia and their concentrations in plasma and Na + , K + ATPase; v-type H + ATPase and carbonic anhydrase activities in gills were measured. The presence of DOC had negligible effects at pH 7.0 apart from lowering the TEP, but it prevented the depolarization of TEP that occurred at pH 4.0 in the absence of DOC. However, contrary to our initial hypothesis, SGC DOC was not protective against the effects of low pH. Colossoma macropomum exposed to SGC DOC at pH 4.0 experienced greater net Na + and Cl − losses, decreases of Na + and Cl − concentrations in plasma and elevated plasma ammonia levels and excretion rates, relative to those exposed in the absence of DOC. Species-specific differences and changes in DOC properties during storage are discussed as possible factors influencing the effectiveness of SGC DOC in ameliorating the effects of the acid exposure. © 2019 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1111/jfb.13943
Appears in Collections:Artigos

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