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潜水变色龙中水下再呼吸的重复进化。

Repeated evolution of underwater rebreathing in diving Anolis lizards.

机构信息

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, ON M5S 3B2, Canada.

Department of Biological Sciences, Binghamton University, State University of New York, New York, NY 13902, USA; Environmental Studies Program, Binghamton University, State University of New York, New York, NY 13902, USA.

出版信息

Curr Biol. 2021 Jul 12;31(13):2947-2954.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.04.040. Epub 2021 May 12.

Abstract

Air-based respiration limits the use of aquatic environments by ancestrally terrestrial animals. To overcome this challenge, diving arthropods have evolved to respire without resurfacing using air held between their cuticle and surrounding water. Inspired by natural history observations in Haiti (unpublished data) and Costa Rica, we conducted experiments documenting routine air-based underwater respiration in several distantly related semi-aquatic Anolis lizard species. Semi-aquatic anoles live along neotropical streams and frequently dive for refuge or food, remaining underwater for up to 18 min. While submerged, these lizards iteratively expire and re-inspire narial air bubbles-underwater "rebreathing." Rebreathed air is used in respiration, as the partial pressure of oxygen in the bubbles decreases with experimental submersion time in living anoles, but not in mechanical controls. Non-aquatic anoles occasionally rebreathe when submerged but exhibit more rudimentary rebreathing behaviors. Anole rebreathing is facilitated by a thin air layer (i.e., a "plastron," sensu Brocher) supported by the animal's rugose skin upon submergence. We suggest that hydrophobic skin, which we observed in all sampled anoles, may have been exaptative, facilitating the repeated evolution of specialized rebreathing in species that regularly dive. Phylogenetic analyses strongly suggest that specialized rebreathing is adaptive for semi-aquatic habitat specialists. Air-based rebreathing may enhance dive performance by incorporating dead space air from the buccal cavity or plastron into the lungs, facilitating clearance of carbon dioxide, or allowing uptake of oxygen from surrounding water (i.e., a "physical gill" mechanism).

摘要

空气呼吸限制了祖先在陆地上的动物对水生环境的利用。为了克服这一挑战,潜水节肢动物进化出了无需浮出水面即可呼吸的能力,它们利用角质层和周围水之间的空气来呼吸。受海地(未发表数据)和哥斯达黎加自然历史观察的启发,我们进行了实验,记录了几种亲缘关系较远的半水生变色蜥蜴物种在常规水下空气呼吸的情况。半水生变色蜥蜴生活在新热带溪流沿岸,经常潜水避难或觅食,在水下停留长达 18 分钟。在潜水时,这些蜥蜴会反复呼出和重新吸入鼻腔气泡——水下“再呼吸”。再呼吸的空气用于呼吸,因为在活变色蜥蜴的实验浸没时间内,气泡中的氧气分压会降低,但在机械对照中不会。非水生变色蜥蜴偶尔在潜水时也会再呼吸,但表现出更原始的再呼吸行为。变色蜥蜴的再呼吸是由其粗糙皮肤在浸没时支撑的一层薄薄的空气(即“胸甲”,如 Brocher 所述)来促进的。我们认为,疏水皮肤可能是适应进化的,在经常潜水的物种中,它促进了专门的再呼吸的反复进化。所有被采样的变色蜥蜴都具有疏水皮肤,这一点我们观察到了。系统发育分析强烈表明,专门的再呼吸对于半水生栖息地的特化物种是适应性的。空气再呼吸可以通过将口腔或胸甲中的死腔空气纳入肺部,促进二氧化碳的清除,或允许从周围水中摄取氧气(即“物理鳃”机制),从而提高潜水性能。

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