By: Denver Coleman
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As
small children we are taught that the ocean is filled with a multitude of fish
and invertebrates, like the mantis shrimp, and the land we live on is stocked
full of lions, tiger and bears. Oh my! (One day that joke will get old, but
today is not that day.) However, there is one animal that breaks free of this
stereotypical taxonomic bond. These animals are too awesome to be restricted to
one ecosystem. They are the masters of both the land and sea. They are… the
Lungfish of the subclass Dipnoi. As its name implies these creatures are capable
of living and breathing in water as well as on land. Lungfish utilize a
modified gas bladder to store atmospheric oxygen, thereby turning it into a respiratory
organ (Burggren 1988). They are so adapted to being a “fish out of water” that
during drought conditions they can even enter a state of sleep known as
aestivation for as long as four years while waiting for a drought to pass (Johansen
1968). This animal make Aquaman look like a little pansy. Since these animals
can survive in both aquatic and terrestrial environments they have become a model
organism for studying the tetrapod transition from sea onto land. In this
article, we will explore the anatomy and physiology behind respiration and
circulation in lungfish.
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Living
in some of the driest parts of the world can be tough on a fish. When the
waters dry up, the Lungfish will digs itself into the mud by gulping down
sediment and expelling it through its operculum (gill flap). It will then
secrete gooey mucus from its body that completely encases its body in a slime
sarcophagus. This is vaguely starting to sound like my high-school prom date. Inside
this cocoon the Lungfish will enter a state of aestivation, characterized as a depressed
metabolism and heart rate, a suppression of urine and an increase in the
production of metabolites (Burggren & Johansen 1986; Fishman et al. 1992). The
adaption for atmospheric inspiration allows the Lungfish to survive through the
longest of drought seasons.
If it isn’t already obvious, a fish shouldn’t be able to breath oxygen. If you have ever gone fishing you will remember the fish gulping down air as it is pulled from the water. Teleost gills are designed for the diffusion of oxygen in water and cannot properly function in the air. These guys will just drop on the deck and flop like a fish. SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS! In order to better understand this weird mechanism behind a Lungfish’s breathing ability we need to look at its anatomical structures.
It’s important to note that lungfish
are not the only species to have developed the ability to inspire atmospheric
oxygen. The evolution of aerial respiration has arisen in more than 70 of the 4,000
known genera of fish (Bertin 1958; Gans 1970). Fish have developed air
breathing from multitude of organs, including the alimentary canal, pharynx, air
bladder, and esophagus and the development of the air-breathing organs in
Lungfish is considered relatively simple when compared to that of tetrapods
(Johansen 1970).
The gas exchange of CO2 and O2 in Lungfish. Johansen & Lenfant 1968 |
A typical fish uses counter current
exchange to acquire O2 and expel CO2. Water flows over the
gills in the opposite direction as blood to allow for maximum extraction of O2
from water. In hypoxic environments a large stress is put on the organism to
maintain a diffusive balance. Lungfish have developed lungs in order to
maintain plasma O2 levels even in the presence of low oxygenated
water. In a study on Protopterus aethipicus, researchers used
X-ray imagining to examine the mechanism behind gill and lung respiration (McMahon
1969). Researchers found that in an aquatic environment the P. aethipicus will utilize a combination
of buccal pumping and opercula suctioning to transport water across its gills. Interestingly
in the presence of air the animals will open its glottis at the back of its
throat to expose its alimentary canal. This is seen as the action of swallowing
surface oxygen. The opercular gill flaps are kept closed by the constrictor
muscles to prevent oxygen from escaping over the gills (Burggren & Johansen
1986) and the animal will then close its mouth on the air and depress its
buccal floor to force the oxygen into the air bladder. This swallowed air in
the bladder comes in contact with the highly vascularized epithelial tissue and
subsequent gas exchange can occur. This use of a primitive lung for respiration
is often times secondary to the gills, but in some species aerial ventilation
is required for survival. In adult Protopterus
and Lepidosiren, at least 90% of O2
uptake occurs in the lungs (Burggren & Johansen1986). I guess this answers
the question I asked as a child: Can a fish drown? Yes! Studies have shown P. aethipicus to be so dependent on its
pulmonary respiration that blood O2 will remain unchanged even in
the presence of hypoxic waters (Johansen & Lenfant 1968). Before the
developmental importance of the ribs and diaphragm, scientists believe the
earliest tetrapods utilized this this type of buccal-pressure-pumping (McMahon
1970). The Lungfish evolved this dual breathing mechanisms and therefore had to
develop a similarly unique method of circulation.
Blood Shunting in the Lungfish.
Szidon et al
1969
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Teleost
fish have a single circuit system that goes in sequential order from the heart
to the gills to the systemic tissues and back to the heart. This type of
circulation is simple and is able to support the basic demands of a fish. The
Lungfish has developed a divergent circulatory system that can travel to either
the gills or the lungs. This dichotomous circulation prevents the unused
respiratory organ from becoming an oxygen sink that would steal oxygen from the
circulation. To accommodate divergent circulation the Lungfish pumps blood
through trabeculated grooves in its heart to prevent the mixing of oxygenated
and deoxygenated blood (Szidon et al 1969; Icardo et al 2005). These animals
can shunt blood through its spiral and ventrolateral grooves to flow to the
appropriate respiratory organ (Johansen & Burggren 1980). Depending on its
current environment the Lungfish can decide to bypass either the lungs or the
gills based on their oxygen demands. This quick transitioning allows the animal
to avoid predation by escaping into an adjacent environment.
This exceptional ability of the
lungfish to differentiate itself from the stereotypical fish model has given it
an evolutionary advantage over non-air breathing fish. Air breathing has
developed in a number of ways amongst fish, but it has developed most
extensively in the Lungfish. These animals have remained in a flux between an aquatic
and terrestrial environment for hundreds of millions of years, allowing it to exploit
a unique niche in semi-xeric environments. They maintain their significance in
scientific research because of their distinctive anatomical structures in the
presence of a myriad of environmental stressors.
Everyone loves a Lungfish.
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Bertin, L. 1958.
Organes de la respiration aerienne. Traite de Zoologie 13: 1363-1374.
Bishop, I.R.,
and E.H. Foxon. 1967. The mechanism of breathing in the South American
Lungfish, Lepidosiren paradoxa: A radiological study.
Journal of Zoology 154: 263-271.
Burggren, W.W.
1988. Cardiac design in lower vertebrates: What can phylogeny reveal about
ontogeny. Experientia 144: 919-930.
Burggren, W.W.,
and K. Johansen. 1986. Circulation and respiration in lungfishes Dipnoi. Journal of Morphology Supplement
1: 217-236.
Fishman, A.P.,
R.J. Galante, A. Winokur, and A.I. Pack. 1992. Estivation in the African
lungfish. American Philosophical Society 136: 61-72.
Gans, C. 1970. Strategy
and sequence in the evolution of the external gas exchangers of ectothermal
vertebrates. Forma et Functio 3: 61-70.
Graham, J.B.
1997. Air-breathing fishes: Evolution, diversity and adaptation. San Diego,
C.A. Academic Press, pp. 299.
Icardo, J.M., E.
Brunelli, I. Perrotta, E. Colvée, and W.P. Wong. 2005. Ventricle and outflow
tract of the African lungfish Protopterus
dolloi. Journal of Morphology 265: 43-51.
Johansen, K.
1970. Air breathing in fishes. Fish Physiology 4th ed. New York, N.Y. Academic
Press, pp. 361-411.
Johansen, K.,
and W. Burggren. 1980. Cardiovascular function in lower vertebrates: Hearts and
heart-like oreans. New York, N.Y. Academic Press, pp. 61-117.
Johansen, K.,
and C. Lenfant. 1968. Respiration in the African lungfish, Protopterus aethiopicus: Control of breathing. The Journal of
Experimental Biology 49: 453-468.
McMahon, B.
1969. A functional analysis of the aquatic and aerial respiratory movements of
an African lungfish Protopterus
aethiopicus, with reference to the evolution of the lung-ventilation
mechanism in vertebrates. The Journal of Experimental Biology 5: 407-430.
McMahon, B.
1970. The relative efficiency of gaseous exchange across the lungs and gills of
an African lungfish Protopterus aethiopicus.
The Journal of Experimental Biology 52: 1-15.
Szidon, J.P., L.
Sukhamay, M. Lev, and A.P. Fishman. 1969. Heart and circulation of the African
Lungfish. Circulation Research 25: 23-38.
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