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A morphometric analysis of the lungs of high‐altitude ducks and geese
Author(s) -
Bakkeren Ciska,
Smith Emily,
York Julia M.,
Chua Beverly,
McCracken Kevin G.,
Milsom William K.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of anatomy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.932
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1469-7580
pISSN - 0021-8782
DOI - 10.1111/joa.13180
Subject(s) - goose , effects of high altitude on humans , altitude (triangle) , biology , anas , lung , zoology , lung volumes , branta , anatomy , ecology , medicine , geometry , mathematics
Abstract We examined the morphology of the lungs of five species of high‐altitude resident ducks from Lake Titicaca in the Peruvian Andes (yellow‐billed pintail [ Anas georgica ], cinnamon teal [ Anas cyanoptera orinomus ], puna teal [ Anas puna ], speckled teal [ Anas flavirostris oxyptera ], and ruddy duck [ Oxyura jamaicensis ferruginea ]) and compared them with those of the high‐altitude migratory bar‐headed goose ( Anser indicus ) and the low‐altitude migratory barnacle goose ( Branta leucopsis ). We then determined the relationship between mass‐specific lung volume, the volume densities of the component parts of the lung, and previously reported hypoxia‐induced increases in pulmonary O 2 extraction. We found that the mass‐specific lung volumes and the mass‐specific volume of the exchange tissue were larger in the lungs of high‐altitude resident birds. The bar‐headed goose had a mass‐specific lung volume that fell between those of the low‐altitude species and the high‐altitude residents, but a mass‐specific volume of exchange tissue that was not significantly different than that of the high‐altitude residents. The data suggest that the mass‐specific volume of the lung may increase with evolutionary time spent at altitude. We found an inverse relationship between the percentage increase in pulmonary O 2 extraction and the percentage increase in ventilation across species that was independent of the volume density of the exchange tissue, at least for the resident Andean birds.