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Total body water and adaptive water turnover rate in four chromosomal species of subterranean mole rats of the Spalax ehrenbergi superspecies in Israel
Author(s) -
YAHAV S.,
SIMSON S.,
NEVO E.
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
journal of zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.915
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1469-7998
pISSN - 0952-8369
DOI - 10.1111/j.1469-7998.1989.tb02557.x
Subject(s) - deserts and xeric shrublands , biology , dehydration , zoology , tritiated water , population , body water , mole , arid , ecology , body weight , botany , biochemistry , endocrinology , tritium , physics , demography , sociology , habitat , nuclear physics
Total body water (TBW) and water turnover rate (WTR) were measured in 24 subterranean mole rats comprising four populations, each belonging to a different chromosomal species of the Spalax ehrenbergi superspecies in Israel. The four species range in different climates: humid‐cool (2n = 52); semiarid‐cool (2n = 54); humid‐warm (2n = 58) and arid‐warm (2n = 60). TBW, as a percentage of body weight, measured by tritiated water (HTO), was 72.4%±4–7 in 2n = 52, significantly ( P < 005) higher than the similar estimates 61.7%± 7.2, and 59.4%± 5–3, for 2n = 60 and 58, respectively. A comparison of HTO space, as a percentage of TBW, closely approximated TBW, ranging from 97% to 108%. WTR was high, 218.1 and 230.9 ml/kg 0‐75 /day in the mesic populations of 2n = 58 and 52, respectively. By contrast, WTR estimates were significantly lower , ( P < 0.001), 150.2 and 148.9 ml/kg 0‐75 /day in the xeric populations of 2n = 54 and 60, respectively. The biological half‐life time, T 1/2 , was similar and faster, 32.7 and 27.9 hours in the mesic populations of 2n = 52 and 58, as compared with slower, 47.9 and 40.8 hours in the xeric populations of 2n = 54 and 60, respectively. Urine osmolarity in the most xeric northern Negev steppic population of 2n = 60 (737 ± 45 mmol/kg) was significantly ( P < 0.001) higher than in the other species. We conclude that adaptive radiation in the Spalax ehrenbergi superspecies involves speciation in semiarid (2n = 54) and arid (2n = 60) climates by physiological adaptations of kidney water conservation, along with multiple morphological, physiological and behavioural syndromes of climatic adaptations to increasing aridity (Nevo, 1986).