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First published online May 8, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 1673-1686 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02718
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Tribute to P. L. Lutz: respiratory ecophysiology of coral-reef teleosts

Göran E. Nilsson1,*, Jean-Paul A. Hobbs2 and Sara Östlund-Nilsson3

1 Department of Molecular Biosciences, University of Oslo, N-0316 Oslo, Norway
2 ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and School of Marine and Tropical Biology, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia
3 National Library of Norway, Oslo, Norway


Figure 1
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Fig. 1. Coral reef at Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia. This picture depicts daytime behaviour of damsefishes (here mainly represented by the genera Pomacentrus and Chromis) hovering above a colony of Acropora nasuta. At night, these fishes shelter between branches in the coral, a microhabitat that can be severely hypoxic. Photo by G. E. Nilsson.

 

Figure 2
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Fig. 2. Coral colonies can be severely hypoxic habitats at night. The graphs show the oxygen levels (A) outside and (B) between branches of Acropora nasuta colonies from dusk to dawn. Values are means ± s.e.m. from six measurements on three corals in an outdoor tank at Lizard Island Research Station. Sunset and sunrise are indicated by broken lines. From Nilsson et al. (Nilsson et al., 2004Go).

 

Figure 3
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Fig. 3. Sleep swimming in the damselfish Dascyllus marginatus measured by video filming them in infrared light on a coral reef in Eilat, Red Sea. The stroke frequencies of the dorsal, pectoral and caudal fins are about doubled at night when the fish hide inside coral (Stylophora pistillata) compared to the `normal swimming' performed outside the coral during the day. From Goldshmid et al. (Goldshmid et al., 2004Go). Reproduced with permission from Limnology and Oceanography.

 

Figure 4
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Fig. 4. (A) Fishes (Chromis viridis) sheltering in the hypoxic water inside a coral colony (Acropora sp.) on the Lizard Island reef at night during low tide. Oxygen levels between the coral branches varied between 12 and 20% of air saturation. (B) A predatory rockcod (Epinephelus spilotoceps) lies outside the coral and provides a good reason for the smaller fishes to use the coral as nocturnal shelter. Photo G. E. Nilsson.

 

Figure 5
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Fig. 5. Obligate coral dwellers represented by Gobiodon axillaris (A, left, B), Paragobiodon xanthosomus (A, middle), Caracanthus unipinna (A, right), and Gobiodon histrio (C). These fishes spend virtually their whole life between branches of coral, and show a high degree of hypoxia tolerance. Moreover, G. axillaris, G. histrio and C. unipinna have excellent abilities for air breathing, apparently through their scaleless skin. Air breathing is needed if their coral home becomes air exposed. C shows G. histrio in a coral colony that has become air exposed during a nocturnal low tide at the Lizard Island reef. Photos by G. E. Nilsson.

 

Figure 6
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Fig. 6. A female (A, left) and male (A, right) of the cardinalfish Apogon leptacanthus. The male is mouthbrooding, as revealed by its expanded lower jaw. The egg mass of this species makes up about 14% of the body mass of the male, and constitutes a considerable respiratory obstacle. (B) A male of Apogon fragilis spitting his brood when exposed to hypoxia in a closed respirometer, thereby significantly increasing his ability to take up oxygen. Photos by G. E. Nilsson.

 

Figure 7
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Fig. 7. Coral-reef fish larvae need to make a transition from top swimming performance to hypoxia tolerance when they settle on a reef. Relationship between body mass and (A) oxygen consumption at maximal swimming speed, and (B) hypoxia tolerance (measured as [O2]crit) in larvae and juveniles of Chromis atripectoralis. Note the transient drop in maximum oxygen uptake and simultaneous increase in hypoxia tolerance (seen as a drop in [O2]crit) that occur when the larvae settle on the reef and become post-settlement juveniles. Data from Nilsson et al. (Nilsson et al., 2007bGo).

 

Figure 8
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Fig. 8. Transient fall in maximum sustained swimming speed (Ucrit) when post-settlement size is reached in two species of damselfish, Amphiprion melanopus (A) and Pomacentrus ambionensis (B). The fishes were reared in the laboratory and tested in a swimming flume. From Bellwood and Fisher (Bellwood and Fisher, 2001Go). Reproduced with permission from Marine Ecology Progress Series.

 

Figure 9
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Fig. 9. Relationship between body mass and (A) hypoxia tolerance (critical oxygen concentration), and (B) metabolic rate (routine oxygen consumption) in juvenile and adult coral-reef fishes (excluding pre-settlement larvae). Note that while hypoxia tolerance does not change with body mass, metabolic rate shows the `classical' scaling relationship with body mass. The dataset includes 174 individuals weighing between 40 mg and 40 g and representing 35 species from six families, and is largely the same as that presented in Table 1 [mostly from Nilsson and Östlund-Nilsson (Nilsson and Östlund-Nilsson, 2004Go), with additional individuals from Östlund-Nilsson and Nilsson (Östlund-Nilsson and Nilsson, 2004Go) and Nilsson et al. (Nilsson et al., 2007bGo)]. For the whole dataset, the mass-specific metabolic rate was related to mass–0.367 (which translates into a scaling exponent of 1–0.367=0.633 for absolute metabolic rate; r=0.80). For the best represented family, Pomacentridae with 99 individuals from 14 species, the same scaling exponents were –0.347 (mass-specific metabolic rate) and 0.653 (absolute metabolic rate) (r=0.94). Temperature was 28–30°C.

 





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