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Understanding the gastrointestinal physiology and responses to feeding in air‐breathing Anabantiform fishes
Author(s) -
Goodrich Harriet R.,
Bayley Mark,
Birgersson Lina,
Davison William G.,
Johannsson Ora E.,
Kim Anne B.,
Le My Phuong,
Tinh Tran H.,
Thanh Phuong N.,
Thanh Huong Do Thi,
Wood Chris M.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of fish biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.672
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1095-8649
pISSN - 0022-1112
DOI - 10.1111/jfb.14288
Subject(s) - biology , snakehead , perch , predatory fish , anabas testudineus , perciformes , ecology , zoology , fishery , predation , fish <actinopterygii>
The Mekong Delta is host to a large number of freshwater species, including a unique group of facultative air‐breathing Anabantiforms. Of these, the striped snakehead ( Channa striata ), the climbing perch ( Anabas testudineus ), the giant gourami ( Osphronemus goramy ) and the snakeskin gourami ( Trichogaster pectoralis ) are major contributors to aquaculture production in Vietnam. The gastrointestinal responses to feeding in these four species are detailed here. Relative intestinal length was lowest in the snakehead, indicating carnivory, and 5.5‐fold greater in the snakeskin, indicating herbivory; climbing perch and giant gourami were intermediate, indicating omnivory. N‐waste excretion (ammonia‐N + urea‐N) was greatest in the carnivorous snakehead and least in the herbivorous snakeskin, whereas the opposite trend was observed for net K + excretion. Similarly, the more carnivorous species had a greater stomach acidity than the more herbivorous species. Measurements of acid–base flux to water indicated that the greatest postprandial alkaline tide occurred in the snakehead and a potential acidic tide in the snakeskin. Additional findings of interest were high levels of both PCO 2 (up to 40 mmHg) and HCO 3 − (up to 33 mM) in the intestinal chyme of all four of these air‐breathing species. Using in vitro gut sac preparations of the climbing perch, it was shown that the intestinal net absorption of fluid, Na + and HCO 3 − was upregulated by feeding but not net Cl − uptake, glucose uptake or K + secretion. Upregulated net absorption of HCO 3 − suggests that the high chyme (HCO 3 − ) does not result from secretion by the intestinal epithelium. The possibility of ventilatory control of PCO 2 to regulate postprandial acid–base balance in these air‐breathing fish is discussed.

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