Laboratorio de Evolución, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, Iguá 4225, 11400, Montevideo, Uruguay.
J Comp Physiol B. 2010 Aug;180(6):877-84. doi: 10.1007/s00360-010-0465-y. Epub 2010 Mar 30.
Subterranean rodents construct large and complex burrows and spend most of their lives underground, while fossorial species construct simpler burrows and are more active above ground. An important constraint faced by subterranean mammals is the chronic hypoxia and hypercapnia of the burrow atmosphere. The traits, regarded as "adaptations of rodents to hypoxia and hypercapnia", have been evaluated in only a few subterranean species. In addition, well-studied subterranean taxa are very divergent to their sister groups, making it difficult to assess the adaptive path leading to subterranean life. The closely related sister genera Octodon and Spalacopus of Neotropical rodents offer a unique opportunity to trace the evolution of physiological mechanisms. We studied the ventilatory responses of selected octodontid rodents to selective pressures imposed by the subterranean niche under the working hypothesis that life underground, in hypoxic and hypercapnic conditions, promotes convergent physiological changes. To perform this study we used the following species: Spalacopus cyanus (the subterranean coruros) and Octodon degus (the fossorial degus) from central Chile. Ventilatory tidal volume and respiratory frequency were measured in non-anaesthetized spontaneously breathing animals. Acute hypoxic challenges (O(2) 1-15%) and hypercapnia (CO(2) 10%) were induced to study respiratory strategies using non-invasive whole body pletismography techniques. Our results show that coruros have a larger ventilatory response to acute hypoxia as than degus. On the other hand, hypercapnic respiratory responses in coruros seem to be attenuated when compared to those in degus. Our results suggest that coruros and degus have different respiratory strategies to survive in the hypoxic and hypercapnic atmospheres present in their burrows.
穴居啮齿动物构建大型且复杂的洞穴,并将大部分生命都在地下度过,而穴居物种则构建更简单的洞穴,且在地面上更为活跃。地下哺乳动物面临的一个重要限制因素是洞穴大气中的慢性缺氧和高碳酸血症。这些被认为是“啮齿动物对缺氧和高碳酸血症的适应”的特征,仅在少数几种地下物种中进行了评估。此外,经过充分研究的地下分类群与其姐妹群非常不同,因此难以评估导致地下生活的适应途径。新热带啮齿动物的近亲属 Octodon 和 Spalacopus 提供了一个独特的机会,可以追踪生理机制的进化。我们研究了选定的八齿鼠属啮齿动物对地下小生境选择压力的呼吸反应,假设地下生活在缺氧和高碳酸血症条件下会促进趋同的生理变化,这是我们的工作假说。为了进行这项研究,我们使用了以下物种:来自智利中部的地下穴居的 Spalacopus cyanus(穴居coruros)和穴居的 Octodon degus(穴居 degus)。在非麻醉、自然呼吸的动物中测量潮气量和呼吸频率。使用非侵入性全身 plethysmography 技术,进行急性低氧挑战(O2 1-15%)和高碳酸血症(CO2 10%),以研究呼吸策略。我们的结果表明,coruros 对急性低氧的呼吸反应比 degus 更大。另一方面,与 degus 相比,coruros 对高碳酸血症的呼吸反应似乎减弱了。我们的结果表明,coruros 和 degus 具有不同的呼吸策略来在其洞穴中存在的缺氧和高碳酸气氛中生存。