Acute hypoxia exposure rapidly triggers behavioral changes linked to cutaneous gas exchange in Lake Titicaca frogs.

cutaneous respiration frogs pushup behavior ventilation

Journal

Behavioural processes
ISSN: 1872-8308
Titre abrégé: Behav Processes
Pays: Netherlands
ID NLM: 7703854

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
16 May 2024
Historique:
received: 07 12 2023
revised: 07 03 2024
accepted: 14 05 2024
medline: 19 5 2024
pubmed: 19 5 2024
entrez: 18 5 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Ventilation is critical to animal life-it ensures that individuals move air/water across their respiratory surface, and thus it sustains gas exchange with the environment. Many species have evolved highly specialized (if not unusual) ventilatory mechanisms, including the use of behavior to facilitate different aspects of breathing. However, these behavioral traits are often only described anecdotally, and the ecological conditions that elicit them are typically unclear. We study one such "ventilation behavior" in Lake Titicaca frogs (Telmatobius culeus). These frogs inhabit high-altitude (i.e., low oxygen) lakes in the Andean Mountains of South America, and they have become textbook examples of cutaneous gas exchange, which is essentially breathing that occurs across the skin. Accordingly, this species has evolved large, baggy skin-folds that dangle from the body to increase the surface area for ventilation. We show that individuals exposed to acute hypoxic conditions that mirror what free-living individuals likely encounter quickly (within minutes) decrease their activity levels, and thus become very still. If oxygen levels continue to decline, the frogs soon begin to perform push-up behaviors that presumably break the low-oxygen boundary layer around skin-folds to increase the conductance of the water/skin gas exchange pathway. Altogether, we suspect that individuals rapidly adjust aspects of their behavior in response to seemingly sudden changes to the oxygen environment as a mechanism to fine tune cutaneous respiration.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38762053
pii: S0376-6357(24)00062-7
doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2024.105047
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

105047

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Jordan De Padova (J)

Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 02912 USA.

Nigel K Anderson (NK)

Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 02912 USA.

Roland Halbauer (R)

Vienna Zoo, Vienna, Austria.

Doris Preininger (D)

Vienna Zoo, Vienna, Austria; Department of Evolutionary Biology, University of Vienna, Austria.

Matthew J Fuxjager (MJ)

Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 02912 USA. Electronic address: matthew_fuxjager@brown.edu.

Classifications MeSH