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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
Review Article |
Tribute to P. L. Lutz: respiratory ecophysiology of coral-reef teleosts
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
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: g.e.nilsson{at}imbv.uio.no)
Accepted 15 January 2007
| Summary |
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Key words: hypoxia, coral reef, fish larvae, Pomacentridae, Gobiidae, Apogonidae
| Introduction |
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Animals that take up their oxygen from water run a much greater risk of
experiencing hypoxia than air breathers. This is because the concentration of
oxygen in air-saturated water is only about 35% of that in air, and
because oxygen diffuses some 10 000 times faster in air than in water. Thus,
aquatic organisms may use up the oxygen in their surroundings before it is
replenished by diffusion or photosynthesis. Hypoxia is particularly likely to
occur at night, when the lack of light stops photosynthesis and forces plants
to rely on respiration for their energy supply. While it is well known that
hypoxia has a great influence on tropical freshwater habitats (e.g.
Val et al., 2006
), it has only
recently become apparent that hypoxia also shapes the teleost fauna on
tropical coral reefs. Thus, in the areas with the most diverse fish faunas,
which include tropical freshwater systems, such as that of the Amazon river,
and tropical coral reefs, hypoxia is a major abiotic selection pressure.
Still, the exploration of how hypoxia has shaped coral-reef fishes has just
begun, and the high complexity and biodiversity of this ecosystem indicate
that we can expect to find a wealth of adaptations to hypoxia. In this review,
we will summarize our present understanding of the respiratory challenges that
coral-reef teleosts have to cope with. We begin with an overview of the
prevalence of hypoxia tolerance in coral-reef fishes and identify where and
when coral-reef fishes are likely to experience hypoxia. Following this, we
highlight specific cases of respiratory adaptation and examine the respiratory
abilities of larval fish and the ontogeny of respiratory physiology. We
attempt to link physiological adaptations with the environment that presumably
promoted their evolution.
| Hypoxia tolerance in coral-reef fishes |
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At the time of our first experiments, we did not think of coral reef fishes
as inhabitants of hypoxic habitats, except in the special case of the
epaulette shark on shallow tidal flats (reviewed by
Nilsson and Renshaw, 2004
),
which are known to periodically become large hypoxic tide pools at night
(Orr, 1933
). Tolerating
hypoxia in warm water, like the 30°C water of a tropical coral reef,
should be more challenging than in colder water. Thus, it seems to be a
considerable physiological achievement of coral-reef fishes to maintain
O2 uptake in hypoxia, due to the combined effects of a low
solubility of O2 in warm seawater, and the high rate of oxygen
consumption of a small fish at such a high temperature. Most of the fishes
studied weighed less than 10 g and had routine rates of oxygen consumption
(
O2) of
200700 mg O2 kg1 h1,
which is about 25 times higher than that of fishes living at
1020°C in temperate waters (see
Clarke and Johnston, 1999
).
The [O2]crit values shown by the coral-reef fishes
were similar to those of tropical freshwater fishes that inhabit hypoxic
waters and are renowned for their hypoxia tolerance. For example, African
cichlid species, including tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus), show
[O2]crit values of about 20% of air saturation at
25°C (Verheyen et al.,
1994
). The elephant nose fish (Gnathonemus petersii) from
central Africa has a [O2]crit as low as 10% at 26°C
(Nilsson, 1996
), while adults
of the hypoxia tolerant oscar cichlid (Astronotus ocellatus) of the
Amazon river have an [O2]crit value of 30%
(Sloman et al., 2006
). In
those measurements, like in our measurements on reef fish, closed respirometry
was used. This method mimics the hypoxic situation in nature, where oxygen is
used up by aerobic organisms converting O2 into CO2,
thereby creating hypoxia as well as hypercapnia. Moreover, a closed
respirometer is relatively simple, lightweight and transportable, making it
ideal to use in the field.
Although hypercapnia (high PCO2) is associated with low
oxygen environments, both in a closed respirometer and in the field, we have
focused our research on hypoxia, since hypercapnia is unlikely to be a major
challenge in warm seawater because it is well buffered (see
Kalle, 1972
) and holds
relatively little O2 that can be converted into CO2 even
when air saturated. Thus, in marine tide pools that are supersaturated
(200300%) with O2 in the day, PCO2 does
not reach levels much higher than 2 mmHg, and pH stays above 7.5, when all
this O2 has been consumed at night
(Truchot and Duhamel-Jouve,
1980
). Consequently, PCO2 values in the
respirometer should not reach higher values than about 1 mmHg, which should
not be a major threat to the CO2 excretion of fishes, which
normally have a blood PCO2 near 4 mmHg
(Ishimatsu et al., 2005
).
| Anaerobic energy production the second line of defence |
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| Where is the hypoxia? |
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By focusing on the possibility of nocturnal hypoxia, we envisaged two major
scenarios that could result in coral-reef fishes experiencing hypoxia
(Nilsson and Östlund-Nilsson,
2004
): (i) when fishes hide from predators at night by moving into
the coral colonies and residing between coral branches, or (ii) when fishes
get trapped in tidal pools during nocturnal low tides. While the first
situation could be a ubiquitous cause of hypoxia in coral reef environments,
the latter situation is of course only possible on shallow reefs. It is well
known that hypoxia can occur in tide pools in all kinds of marine ecosystems
(e.g. Horn et al., 1999
), and
with regard to coral reefs, it was noted by European expeditions to Australia
and Java in the 1920s that oxygen levels could fall to about 20% of air
saturation during the dark hours in tidal pools on shallow reefs, or in reef
lagoons temporarily cut off from the ocean
(Verwey, 1931
;
Orr, 1933
).
To test the first hypothesis, we collected live colonies of Acropora
nasuta from the Lizard Island reef, placed these colonies in outdoor
aquaria, and monitored the water oxygen levels between the coral branches. The
recordings showed a progressive reduction in [O2] during the night,
with the average [O2] between the branches falling to 20% of air
saturation just before sunrise (Fig.
2) and, for short periods, [O2] as low as 2% of air
saturation was measured (Nilsson et al.,
2004
).
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These nocturnal surveys confirmed that fishes do reside in these hypoxic
environments. For example, one coral colony (Acropora yongei; about
1.3 m in diameter and with a water [O2] of about 13% between the
branches), was sprayed with clove-oil to temporarily anaesthetize some of its
inhabitants so that they would drift out of the coral and be positively
identified. We counted 77 Chromis viridis, two Pomacentrus
pavo, and one each of Pomacentrus mollucensis, Dascyllus aruanus,
Acanthochromis polyacanthus, Chelmon rostratus and Ostracion
cubicus. The first five species are damselfishes (Pomacentridae), while
the latter are a butterflyfish (Chaetodontidae) and a boxfish (Ostraciidae),
respectively. It was clear that these fishes only made up a fraction of the
fishes hiding in this coral colony and that there may have been hundreds of
fishes residing in about 1 m2 of living coral. It is probable that
these fishes are sheltering in corals at night to avoid predators. This habit
of hiding in coral at night has previously been described
(Fishelson et al., 1974
;
Hixon, 1991
;
Holbrook and Schmitt, 2002
;
Goldshmid et al., 2004
), and
is well known to many night divers. Apparently, to use these nocturnal
shelters, the fishes need the capacity to endure severely hypoxic
environments.
The second scenario where coral-reef fish would experience hypoxia is
through nocturnal occupation of tide pools. The stop of inflow of oceanic
water combined with continued respiration and the lack of photosynthesis at
night will result in tidal pools becoming hypoxic. Oxygen levels as low as
17.8% of air saturation were registered in tide pools at Low Isles (Great
Barrier Reef) at nocturnal low tide (Orr,
1933
). However, it has been unclear to what extent fishes remain
in such hypoxic tide pools. We found the tidal pools formed at nocturnal low
tides at Lizard Island to be severely hypoxic, with oxygen levels typically
within the range of 812% of air saturation. A range of coral-reef
fishes were seen occupying these hypoxic tidal pools, including surgeonfish
(Acanthurus grammoptilus), emperors (Lethrinus sp.), coral
bream (Scolopsis bilineatus), rockcod (Epinephelus
spilotoceps), damselfishes (Chromis viridis, Pomacentus ambionensis,
P. nagasakiensis, P. wardi), butterflyfishes (Chaetodon auriga),
wrasses (Coris batuensis), shrimp goby (Amblyeleotris
steinitzi), sandperch (Parapercis cylindrica) and cardinalfishes
(Apogon spp.). This appears to be a fairly random selection of
coral-reef fishes, rather than a subset of species particularly well adapted
to survival in tide pools. (The exceptions may be the shrimp goby and the
sandperch, which both live in sand burrows on shallow water.) Thus, in
addition to residing within hypoxic coral colonies at night, some coral-reef
fishes also run the risk of encountering severe hypoxia when they venture into
shallow water and get trapped in nocturnal tidal pools.
Further research is likely to unveil coral-reef fishes living in other
hypoxic microhabitats. Many gobiids and blenniids live in sand burrows close
to coral reefs, and are likely to be exposed to hypoxia in their burrow. These
include Amblygobius phalaena
(Table 1), Asterropteryx
semipunctatus (Table 1),
Valenciennea longipinnis (studied by
Takegaki and Nakazono, 1999
)
and V. strigata (Table
1), which all show a considerable hypoxia tolerance.
Interestingly, Amblygobius rainfordi, which live in sandy areas but
does not reside in burrows, shows the highest [O2]out of
the gobiids examined (Table 1).
With regard to parrotfishes (Scaridae) and wrasses (Labridae), their habit of
spending the night in a mucus-cocoon or buried in the sand may lead to
impaired oxygen exchange that demands hypoxia tolerance. Both wrasse species
that we have examined (Halichoeres melanurus, which we observed
burrowing in the aquarium, and Labroides dimideatus, which makes a
cocoon at night) showed a level of hypoxia tolerance that was similar to that
of most other coral reef fishes examined
(Table 1).
Overall, to live on a coral reef means more or less regular encounters with hypoxia for many teleosts. As we shall see next, some may have to endure more than others.
| The obligate coral-dwellers: hypoxia tolerant air breathers |
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Coral-dwelling gobies of the genera Gobiodon are obligate
inhabitants of coral colonies, particularly species of branching
Acropora (Munday et al.,
1997
). Some of these coral colonies not only become hypoxic at
night (see above) but can also become air exposed during very low tides. At
Lizard Island we have observed that colonies of Acropora can become
air exposed for up to 4 h during spring tides. To test if coral-dwelling
gobies can tolerate severe hypoxia and air exposure we initially focused on
Gobiodon histrio, whose preferred coral (Acropora nasuta)
(Munday et al., 1997
;
Hobbs and Munday, 2004
) is
often exposed to air. It was found that G. histrio could not only
tolerate hypoxia ([O2]crit was around 19% of air
saturation, Table 1), but also
endured hours of air exposure (Nilsson et
al., 2004
). The ability to remain in the coral during periods of
hypoxia and air exposure would be a distinct fitness advantage, given the risk
of predation outside the coral and the potential loss of this limited habitat
to other competing gobies (Munday et al.,
2001
; Hobbs and Munday,
2004
).
| Air-breathing ability and habitat choice |
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| Cutaneous air-breathing and toxin production |
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It can be concluded that a high capacity for air breathing has evolved at
least twice in coral-dwelling fishes, and at least in the gobies, this is
probably a relatively late evolutionary event that probably involve the loss
of scales. In contrast to air-breathing fishes in freshwater habitats, marine
air-breathing fishes occupying intertidal zones have generally not evolved
specialized air-breathing organs (Graham,
1976
; Graham,
1997
). Similarly, except for the loss of scales, specialized
organs for oxygen uptake in air appear to be lacking in the obligate coral
dwellers.
While a scaleless skin probably improves cutaneous gas exchange, it is also
likely to make the fish particularly vulnerable to ectoparasites. The species
of the genus Gobiodon secrete a toxic mucus through glands in their
skin. This mucus is highly toxic to other fish attempting to eat them,
indicating a function in predator avoidance
(Schubert et al., 2003
).
However, the scaled skin of Paragobiodon does not contain toxin
glands, which has led to the speculation that the toxin secreted through
glands in the scaleless skin of Gobiodon may be aimed at fighting off
cutaneous parasites. Indeed, a study has suggested that the scales of
Paragobiodon and the toxin of Gobiodon are equally effective
in fighting off ectoparasites, since exposing these gobies to gnathiid isopods
leads to similar infection rates in both genera
(Munday et al., 2003
).
Interestingly, the same study showed that in Gobiodon, body regions
with fewer toxin glands were more vulnerable to these ectoparasites. Thus, in
Gobiodon, evolving a capacity for cutaneous air breathing may have
triggered the evolution of toxin glands to protect the scaleless skin from
parasites.
| Close association with coral correlate with hypoxia tolerance |
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| Hyperoxia an additional challenge? |
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| Tackling hypoxia with a mouth full of eggs |
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The two species studied were found to differ in the mean brood mass, with males of A. fragilis and A. leptacanthus having broods that corresponded to 20% and 14% of the body mass, respectively. This difference clearly affected their performance in hypoxia. When faced with a continuous decrease in the ambient oxygen level in the closed respirometer, both species eventually spat out the clutch (Fig. 6B), thereby sacrificing their offspring while significantly increasing their ability to take up oxygen (i.e. increasing their own chance of hypoxic survival). However, in A. fragilis (the species with the larger egg mass), the brood spitting occurred at a less severe level of hypoxia, 22% of air saturation, compared to A. leptacanthus, which spat out the eggs at 13% of air saturation. Moreover, while mouthbrooding A. leptacanthus were able to increase their ventilatory frequency in response to a falling ambient oxygen level, mouthbrooding A. fragilis were already performing at their maximal ventilatory rate during normoxic conditions. These results clearly indicate a trade-off situation between brood size and hypoxia tolerance. Being able to successfully brood a larger clutch should mean a correspondingly larger increase in fitness. A. fargilis appears to be gambling on a brooding period without any severely hypoxic episodes, attempting to maximize the fitness gained from each brood, while A. leptacanthus does not take this risk. Interestingly, both species occur in the same habitat at daytime, often schooling together, which suggest that these different strategies are not the result of different environmental constraints in the preferred habitat. However, we do not presently know how the different mouthbrooding strategies correlate with their nocturnal habits.
| Ontogeny and respiration: from record swimmers to hypoxia tolerance |
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Many of the late stage pre-settlement larvae are capable of reaching
maximal sustained swimming speeds (Ucrit) of 3050
BL s1
(Stobutzki and Bellwood, 1994
;
Leis and Carson-Ewart, 1997
;
Fisher et al., 2005
). To put
this into perspective, it can be mentioned that larvae of temperate fishes do
not usually reach a Ucrit higher than 45
BL s1 (Blaxter,
1986
; Meng, 1993
).
Similarly, most adult fishes, including salmonids, cannot attain higher
sustained swimming speeds than 57 BL s1. In
fact, not even the fishes best known for exceptional swimming performance,
including swordfish (Xiphias), tunas (Thunnus and
Euthynnus), and the inconnu (Stenodus leucichthys), which
can reach maximal sustained speeds of 1220 BL
s1 (Aleyev,
1977
; Beamish,
1978
), come close to the swimming performance of many coral-reef
fish larvae. Scaling can be used to explain the extraordinary swimming
performance of coral-reef fish larvae. It appears that the smaller a fish is,
the faster it can swim in relation to body size (i.e. in BL
s1). However, this relationship only exists for fish that
have developed a capacity for forceful swimming, and coral-reef fish larvae
are probably the smallest fishes that have such capacities
(Bellwood and Fisher,
2001
).
Swimming can only be sustained if it is fully aerobic and does not lead to
a build up of lactate (Goolish,
1991
). Therefore, one may assume that the extremely high,
sustained (and therefore aerobic) swimming speeds of coral-reef fish larvae
must require very high rates of maximum oxygen uptake
(
O2max). We
recently constructed a miniature swim respirometer that allowed us to measure
O2max during
high-speed swimming in larvae and juveniles of two species of damselfish,
Chromis atripectoralis and Pomacentrus ambionensis
(Nilsson et al., 2007b
). Our
results showed that pre-settlement larvae of C. atripectoralis and
P. ambionensis, swimming at maximal sustained speeds, reach
O2max values of
about 5000 and 4000 mg O2 kg1
h1, respectively, which to our knowledge is the highest
O2max values
ever measured in cold-blooded vertebrates.
C. atripectoralis is one of the fastest swimming coral-reef fish
larvae both in nature and in laboratory race tracks. Thus, Leis and
Carson-Ewart (Leis and Carson-Ewart,
1997
), who had divers swim after released coral-reef fish larvae
in nature, found that pre-settlement larvae of damselfish have some of the
highest maximum sustained swimming speeds. The 17 damselfish species they
examined reached an average maximum speed of 34 BL
s1, with the 10 mm long C. atripectoralis larvae
being the fastest swimmers observed, reaching maximal in situ
swimming speeds of 53 BL s1. Similar results have
later been obtained in swim tunnels
(Fisher et al., 2005
),
although it appears that mean Ucrit values are generally a
bit higher than the average speeds seen in situ. Still, observations
of spontaneous swimming of pre-settlement larvae suggest that they are almost
constantly swimming at high speeds, although they rarely swim at their
Ucrit (Fisher and
Bellwood, 2003
). In comparison with C. atripectoralis, P.
ambionensis is a more average performer among pre-settlement larvae, with
a Ucrit of about of 30 BL s1
(Stobutzki and Bellwood,
1994
).
We also carried out comparative measurements of
O2max in
Acanthochromis polyacanthus, which is one of very few coral-reef
damselfishes showing parental care, thus lacking a planktonic larval stage
(Randall et al., 1997
). The
O2max of
resident A. polyacanthus juveniles weighing 30 mg, corresponding to
the pre-settlement size of other damselfishes, was about 2000 mg O2
kg1 h1, which was significantly lower than
the
O2max of
40005000 mg O2 kg1 h1
that we measured in C. atripectoralis and P. ambionensis
(Nilsson et al., 2007b
). This
low
O2max in
juvenile A. polyacanthus coincides with a comparatively poor swimming
performance of these juveniles, which at a size that is equivalent to
pre-settlement larvae of other damselfishes, only reach a
Ucrit of 12 BL s1
(Fisher et al., 2005
).
We may conclude that the extraordinarily high, sustained swimming speeds of
pre-settlement damselfish larvae are paralleled by extraordinarily high
capacities for rapid oxygen uptake, and that these traits are important
because they enable the larvae to reach a suitable reef at the end of their
planktonic period. However, high aerobic capacities of very active fish
species appear to preclude hypoxia tolerance, and vice versa (for a
review, see Burggren et al.,
1991
). Thus, fishes with highly active life styles and top
swimming performance cannot tolerate low oxygen levels. Salmonids, for
example, display [O2]crit values around 50% of air
saturation (Davis, 1975
), and
tuna die when water [O2] falls below 60% of air saturation
(Gooding et al., 1981
). The
underlying reasons are probably the opposing demands that a high
O2max and
hypoxia tolerance put on the oxygen-carrying properties of haemoglobin. Oxygen
uptake in hypoxia require haemoglobins with high O2 affinities,
which leads to relatively low rates of O2 downloading in the
tissues (O2 has to be downloaded at a low partial pressure, leading
to a small pressure gradient from blood into the mitochondria and therefore a
slow O2 delivery). Therefore, haemoglobins of highly active fish
show lower O2 affinities than those of sedentary species (reviewed
by Burggren et al., 1991
).
As discussed earlier, coral-reef fishes probably need to cope with hypoxia when they shelter in corals at night to avoid predators. An obvious question therefore is: have coral-reef fishes found a unique way to combine extremely high rates of oxygen uptake with hypoxia tolerance? Or, could it be that they change their respiratory performance when they settle on the reef?
To answer these questions, we measured [O2]crit and
O2max with
closed respirometry in pre-settlement larvae, post-settlement larvae, and
juveniles of C. atripectoralis and P. ambionensis, as well
as in juvenile A. polyacanthus of different sizes
(Nilsson et al., 2007b
). For
the two species with planktonic larvae, the results revealed a striking,
almost transient, reduction in
O2max and
[O2]crit within the first 510 days of settlement,
which is illustrated by data for C. atripectoralis in
Fig. 7. Thus, upon settlement,
larval C. atripectoralis and P. ambionensis adjust their
respiratory capacities to increase their hypoxia tolerance at the expense of
rapid oxygen uptake. Our results indicate that it takes about a week for the
settled larvae to attain low [O2]crit values, and that
high anaerobic capacities allow them to survive hypoxic episodes during this
period. Measurements of Ucrit in two species of developing
damselfish (P. ambionensis and the clown-fish Amphiprion
melanopus) also reveal a transient drop in swimming capacity when the
fishes reach settlement size (Bellwood and
Fisher, 2001
) (Fig.
8). Thus, after settlement, these fishes are no longer
exceptionally fast swimmers with high
O2max values,
but instead become hypoxia-tolerant fishes that can utilize the shelter
provided by coral colonies at night.
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| Body size and hypoxia tolerance |
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| Conclusions |
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Studies on obligate coral dwellers (coral gobies and coral crouchers) show that an intimate connection with coral demands a particularly well-developed hypoxia tolerance, and in several cases also a capacity for air breathing, as the coral colonies that they inhabit may become fully air exposed at low tides. It appears that these fishes are able to maintain oxygen uptake in air mainly via cutaneous respiration.
The reproductive modes of some reef fishes may impose additional demands on the respiratory systems. When male cardinalfishes are mouthbrooding, this clearly affects both their hypoxia tolerance and the capacity for sustained aerobic swimming. These males are confronted with a trade-off situation between hypoxia tolerance and brood size.
The planktonic larvae produced by most coral-reef fishes are faced with having to rapidly change their respiratory properties when settling on the reef. From being the fastest swimmers of all fish, with record high rates of oxygen uptake, they have to become hypoxia tolerant upon settlement, so that they can seek shelter in coral colonies at night to avoid predators. After settlement, coral-reef teleosts retain about the same degree of hypoxia tolerance throughout life. Thus, the ability for oxygen uptake in hypoxia appears to be size-independent in fishes inhabiting coral reefs.
Fishes living on coral reefs have been suggested to form the most diverse
vertebrate community in the world (Jones
et al., 2002
). In this habitat, oxygen availability is clearly a
major ambient selection pressure, making respiratory function a key factor for
survival on coral reefs. We can be certain that a wealth of respiratory
adaptations remain to be discovered among coral-reef fishes. Presently, we
have only a rudimentary understanding of how oxygen shapes coral-reef habitats
and of hypoxia adaptations in coral-reef inhabitants. The need for more
knowledge does not only apply to fishes, and not only to respiration, so the
scope for future physiological research on coral reefs is broad.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
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