|
|
|
|||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search Table of Contents | ||||
Bimodal breathing in jumping spiders: morphometric partitioning of the lungs and tracheae in Salticus scenicus (Arachnida, Araneae, Salticidae)
Institut für Zoologie, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, Poppelsdorfer Schloss, 53115 Bonn, Germany
*e-mail: ankeschmitz{at}uni-bonn.de
Accepted 5 October 2001
In jumping spiders, both the book lungs and the tracheal system are well-developed. The tracheal system consists of four thick primary tracheae that branch into small secondary tracheae, some of them ending in the opisthosoma and others entering the prosoma. We used stereological morphometric methods to investigate the morphological diffusing capacity of the lungs and of the walls of the secondary tracheae (lateral diffusing capacity) of two groups of Salticus scenicus with mean body masses of 2.69 mg (group A) and 5.28 mg (group B). The thickness of the gas-exchange epithelium of the lungs was 0.164 µm (group A) and 0.186 µm (group B) for the total diffusion barrier. The secondary tracheae were divided arbitrarily into seven classes according to their inner diameter (17 µm). The diffusion barriers of the tracheal walls tend to be thinnest (0.17 and 0.18 µm) for the smallest tracheae, the walls of the other tracheal classes having approximately the same thickness of diffusion barrier (0.240.32 µm).
The calculated oxygen-diffusing capacity (DO2) for the lungs was 16.4 µl min1 g1 kPa1 for group A and 12 µl min1 g1 kPa1 for group B; the DO2 of the walls of all secondary tracheae was 5.91 µl min1 g1 kPa1 for group A animals and 6.63 µl min1 g1 kPa1 for group B animals.
Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that the tracheal system plays an important role in gas exchange in jumping spiders. Resting and low-activity oxygen consumption rates can be met by the lungs or the tracheae alone, while high oxygen demands can be met only if both respiratory systems are working together. Tracheae entering the prosoma have only 410 % of the total tracheal diffusing capacity, thus providing sufficient oxygen for the nervous system but not being able to prevent muscle fatigue. The similar thickness of the walls of all tracheal classes is consistent with the hypothesis that the secondary tube tracheae function as tracheal lungs, supplying the haemolymph and organs by lateral diffusion.
Key words: Salticidae, jumping spider, Salticus scenicus, tracheal system, anatomical diffusing factor, lateral diffusing capacity, oxygen uptake, respiratory organ.
![]()
CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati
Twitter What's this?