At. Gannon et al., Oxygen uptake, critical oxygen tension, and available oxygen for three species of cave crayfishes, J CRUS BIOL, 19(2), 1999, pp. 235-243
Oxygen consumption rates (MO2) were measured for 3 species of cave-dwelling
crayfishes, Procambarus pallidus, Procambarus erythrops, and Troglocambaru
s maclanei. The MO2 values for the cave-dwelling species were compared to M
O2 values measured previously over a broad range of masses in the surface-d
welling crayfish Pacifastacus leniusculus. MO2 values reported for other su
rface crayfish are not different from Pacifastacus leniusculus of the same
mass. The MO2 values for the cave species were all significantly below the
MO2 values for the surface crayfish of the same mass, indicating that the c
ave crayfish have reduced aerobic metabolism. Critical oxygen tensions or P
(c)s (the ambient oxygen partial pressure (PO2) at which resting MO2 is no
longer constant, but begins to decrease) measured for 2 of the cave species
(P. pallidus, 29 Torr; T. maclanei, 25 Ton) were lower than those reported
in the literature for surface species (35-40 Ton). The third cave species,
P. erythrops, showed no decrease in MO2 down to an ambient PO2 of 20 Ton T
he PO2 measured in water samples taken from 6 of the same submerged caves i
n which the crayfish were found showed great variability (mean = 71 Torr; r
ange = 26-145 Ton), but was not lower than the PO2 of surface water samples
taken outside of the caves. This suggests that low oxygen availability may
not have been the primary selective force in the evolution of reduced oxyg
en uptake rates in cave crayfish.