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Carbon dioxide and pH affect sperm motility of white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus)
Department of Biological Sciences and Center for Reproductive Biology, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho 83844-3051, USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: rolfi{at}uidaho.edu)
Accepted 14 June 2002
Maintenance of sperm at pH values less than approximately 7.5 inhibited the
onset of motility when sperm were subsequently diluted with water; maintenance
at pH values above approximately 8.2 was associated with maximal motility upon
dilution with water. Within 5
min of exposure to low pH buffer (pH 6.9),
there was a 50% decline in sperm motility upon dilution with water suggesting
that exposure to low pH interferes with motility within a time frame that may
affect fertilization. In most instances, maintenance of sperm under
CO2 at a pressure of 4-5 kPa almost completely blocked their
capacity for motility. Furthermore, exposing semen to increasing partial
pressures of CO2 up to about 1 kPa resulted in a marked decrease in
semen pH. These observations are consistent with the findings that the
buffering capacity of semen is particularly low at physiological pH, and that
this low buffering capacity corresponds to the highest pH sensitivity of the
capacity for sperm motility. The low seminal buffering capacity may represent
a physiological adaptation in the control of sperm function. It may also
represent a vulnerability to environmental hypercapnia or metabolic
acidosis.
Key words: Acipenser transmontanus, buffering capacity, carbon dioxide, pH, semen, sperm, motility, sturgeon, Acipenser transmontanus
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