F. Hervant et al., OXYGEN-CONSUMPTION AND VENTILATION IN DECLINING OXYGEN-TENSION AND POSTHYPOXIC RECOVERY IN EPIGEAN AND HYPOGEAN CRUSTACEANS, Journal of crustacean biology, 18(4), 1998, pp. 717-727
Respiratory and ventilatory responses to declining O-2 tension and pos
thypoxic recovery were investigated in 3 hypogean and in 2 epigean aqu
atic crustaceans. The aims of this study were to determine how these s
pecies reacted to declining O-2 tension, to investigate their changes
in ventilation and metabolic rate during progressive hypoxia, and to e
xtend our knowledge on the fate of anaerobic end products during subse
quent recovery. Hypogean organisms had normoxic O-2 consumption rates
1.7-3.5 times lower than the epigean species. All 5 crustaceans were a
ble to main tain their O-2 consumption rates (1) at relatively constan
t levels and (2) independent of Po-2 between normoxia and the critical
Po-2. Hypogean species also possessed lower critical Po-2 than epigea
n ones, which may indicate that these organisms are better adapted to
low O-2 content and are better equipped to stay aerobic under hypoxia.
For all species, posthypoxic recovery resulted in a high O-2 debt. Th
e payment of this debt was smaller in hypogean than in epigean species
. The main explanations of the lower O-2 debt shown by hypogean organi
sms are the lower energetic expenditures noticed during hypoxia, partl
y due to a decrease in locomotory and ventilatory activities.