White Jeff, Schell Elizabeth R, Dawson Neal J, McCracken Kevin G
Department of Biology, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL, USA.
Department of Public and Ecosystem Health, Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine, Ithaca, NY, USA.
J Comp Physiol B. 2025 Apr;195(2):191-208. doi: 10.1007/s00360-024-01593-x. Epub 2024 Dec 20.
Air-breathing vertebrates face many physiological challenges while breath-hold diving. In particular, they must endure intermittent periods of declining oxygen (O) stores, as well as the need to rapidly replenish depleted O at the surface prior to their next dive. While many species show adaptive increases in the O storage capacity of the blood or muscles, others increase the oxidative capacity of the muscles through changes in mitochondrial arrangement, abundance, or remodeling of key metabolic pathways. Here, we assess the diving phenotypes of two sympatric diving birds: the anhinga (Anhinga anhinga) and the double-crested cormorant (Nannopterum auritum). In each, we measured blood- and muscle-O storage capacity, as well as phenotypic characteristics such as muscle fiber composition, capillarity, and mitochondrial arrangement and abundance in the primary flight (pectoralis) and swimming (gastrocnemius) muscles. Finally, we compared the maximal activities of 10 key enzymes in the pectoralis, gastrocnemius, and left ventricle of the heart to assess tissue level oxidative capacity and fuel use. Our results indicate that both species utilize enhanced muscle-O stores over blood-O. This is most apparent in the large difference in available myoglobin in the gastrocnemius between the two species. Oxidative capacity varied significantly between the flight and swimming muscles and between the two species. However, both species showed lower oxidative capacity than expected compared to other diving birds. In particular, the anhinga exhibits a unique diving phenotype with a slightly higher reliance on glycolysis and lower aerobic ATP generation than double-crested cormorants.
在屏气潜水时,用肺呼吸的脊椎动物面临着许多生理挑战。特别是,它们必须忍受氧气(O)储备间歇性下降的时期,以及在下一次潜水前迅速在水面补充耗尽的O的需求。虽然许多物种的血液或肌肉中的O储存能力有适应性增加,但其他物种则通过线粒体排列、丰度的变化或关键代谢途径的重塑来提高肌肉的氧化能力。在这里,我们评估了两种同域分布的潜水鸟类的潜水表型:美洲蛇鹈(Anhinga anhinga)和双冠鸬鹚(Nannopterum auritum)。在每种鸟类中,我们测量了血液和肌肉中的O储存能力,以及表型特征,如初级飞行(胸肌)和游泳(腓肠肌)肌肉中的肌纤维组成、毛细血管密度、线粒体排列和丰度。最后,我们比较了胸肌、腓肠肌和心脏左心室中10种关键酶的最大活性,以评估组织水平的氧化能力和燃料利用情况。我们的结果表明,这两个物种都利用增强的肌肉O储备而非血液O储备。这在两种物种腓肠肌中肌红蛋白可用量的巨大差异中最为明显。飞行肌肉和游泳肌肉之间以及两个物种之间的氧化能力差异显著。然而,与其他潜水鸟类相比,这两个物种的氧化能力都低于预期。特别是,美洲蛇鹈表现出一种独特的潜水表型,与双冠鸬鹚相比,其对糖酵解的依赖略高,有氧ATP生成较低。