Synopsis
The mangrove forest fishRivulus marmoratus (Cyprinodontidae) has frequently been observed out of water, a phenomenon generally attributed to habitat drying. We tested the hypothesis that hydrogen sulfide, a substance characteristically found in their environment, can serve as a stimulus for emersion. In the field we foundR. marmoratus in water with low to moderate levels (<250 ppb) of HS. In the laboratory,R. marmoratus leaped from water contaminated with H2S at ecologically relevant concentrations (median response at 123 ppb). Aquatic hypoxia did not induce emersion, but prey capture did. Oxygen consumption by both juveniles and adults decreased significantly in air (27 and 25%, respectively). Our results suggest that avoidance of H2S and the ability to survive terrestrial conditions enable this species to permanently occupy an area of the forest unavailable to other fishes. Furthermore, because a variety of stimuli lead to etriersion inR. marmoratus, terrestriality in this species is likely a generalized response to environmental stress as well as a means of exploiting terrestrial resources.
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Abel, D.C., Koenig, C.C. & Davis, W.P. Emersion in the mangrove forest fishRivulus marmoratus: a unique response to hydrogen sulfide. Environ Biol Fish 18, 67–72 (1987). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00002329
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00002329