Abstract
Hypercalcemia, hypomagnesia and hypophosphatemia were observed in freshwater (FW) eels (Anguilla rostrata LeSueur) after removal of the corpuscles of Stannius. These changes did not occur if Stanniectomized (CSX) eels were removed from FW and placed on land for 12 days but did occur after the eels were returned to FW. Therefore, changes in plasma electrolyte concentrations after CSX depended upon the branchial and/or integumental influx of ions. Plasma Na+, Cl− and osmolal concentrations decreased gradually in both sham-operated (SHM) and CSX eels on land (12 days) and in FW (12 days). Plasma K+almost doubled in both SHM and CSX eels after 4 days on land, remained elevated, and fell abruptly to normal within a day after the eels were returned in FW. After 2 days on land, urine flow rates in SHM and CSX eels had decreased by approximately 85%, osmolar clearance by 50% and positive free-water clearance by more than 90%. Body weights did not decrease when eels were on land so it was concluded that the reduced but continuous renal loss of water was counterbalanced by the integumental uptake of condensed water.
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Accepted: 21 October 1998
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Butler, D. Osmoregulation in North American eels (Anguilla rostrata LeSueur) on land and in freshwater: effects of the corpuscles of Stannius. J Comp Physiol B 169, 139–147 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s003600050204
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003600050204