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  • OceanRep  (3)
  • 2000-2004  (3)
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  • OceanRep  (3)
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  • 1
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    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 47 (7). pp. 1247-1260.
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: The oxygen consumption rates and activities of key metabolic enzymes were measured and analyzed as a function of habitat depth for several species of benthic octopod (Cephalopoda: Octopoda) including a recently described hydrothermal vent endemic species. Oxygen consumption rates and citrate synthase activity, an indicator of aerobic metabolic potential, did not vary significantly with increasing habitat depth. Anaerobic metabolic potential, as evidenced by octopine dehydrogenase activity, declined significantly with increasing habitat depth. It is suggested that burst swimming abilities, and hence glycolytic potential, are not strongly selected for in the deep-sea, where visual predator-prey interactions are reduced because of light-limitation. Oxygen consumption rates for Octopus californicus and O. bimaculoides were analyzed as a function of oxygen partial pressure as well. O. californicus, which lives in the hypoxic Santa Barbara basin at 500 m depth, was able to regulate its oxygen consumption to the limit of detectable oxygen partial pressures. O. bimaculoides, an intertidal species, had a minimum critical oxygen partial pressure of 16 mmHg. It is also shown that oxygen consumption rates and oxygen consumption regulation are strongly affected by individual experiment duration (either handling stress or food deprivation). O. californicus appears to be much more strongly affected by experiment duration than is O. bimaculoides.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: The present study attempts to correlate the metabolism and locomotory behavior of 25 species of midwater Cephalopoda from California and Hawaii with the maximal activities of key metabolic enzymes in various locomotory muscle tissues. Citrate synthase (CS) and octopine dehydrogenase (ODH) activities were used as indicators of aerobic and anaerobic metabolic potential respectively. CS activity in mantle muscle is highly correlated with whole-animal rates of oxygen consumption, whereas ODH activity in mantle muscle is significantly correlated with a species' ability to buffer the acidic end-products of anaerobic metabolism. Both CS and ODH activities in mantle muscle declined strongly with a species' habitat depth. For example, CS and ODH activities ranged respectively from 0.04 units g- 1 and 0.03 units g- 1 in the deep-living squid Joubiniteuthis portieri, to 8.13 units g- 1 and 420 units g - l in the epipelagic squid Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis. The relationships between enzymatic activities and depth are consistent with similar patterns observed for whole-animal oxygen consumption. This pattern is believed to result from a relaxation, among deep-living species, in the need for strong locomotory abilities for visual predator/prey interactions; the relaxation is due to light-limitation in the deep sea. Intraspecific scaling patterns for ODH activities may, for species that migrate ontogenetically to great depths, reflect the counteracting effects of body size and light on predatorprey detection distances. When scaled allometrically, enzymatic activities for the giant squid, Architeuthis sp., suggest a fairly active aerobic metabolism but little burst swimming capacity. Interspecific differences in the relative distributions of enzymatic activities in fin, mantle, and arm tissue suggest an increased reliance on fin and arm muscle for locomotion among deep-living species. We suggest that, where high-speed locomotion is not required, more efficient means of locomotion, such as fin swimming or medusoid arm propulsion, are more prevalent.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
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    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 313 (2). pp. 375-387.
    Publication Date: 2021-08-23
    Description: The majority of squid families (Teuthoidea: Cephalopoda) exchange sodium for ammonium, creating a low-density fluid that imparts lift for neutral buoyancy. However, previous methods for measuring ammonium did not distinguish between NH4+ and various other amine compounds. The present study, using single column ion chromatography, reassessed the cation concentrations in several midwater cephalopod species. High NH4+ levels were confirmed for histioteuthid, cranchiid, and chiroteuthid and related squids. A strong relationship is reported between ammonium content and body mass in Histioteuthis heteropsis, suggesting a gradual accumulation of ammonium coincident with an ontogenetic migration to greater depths. The bathypelagic squids Bathyteuthis abyssicola and Bathyteuthis berryi, on the other hand, contained very little ammonium but rather contained large quantities of an as yet unidentified cation. The ecological significance of this compound is not yet known. Morphology in Bathyteuthid squids suggests that the unknown cation is contained intracellularly and so, unlike sequestered ammonia, does not diminish the space available for muscle tissue. Accordingly, protein measurements in B. berryi mantle muscle are on par with shallower-living muscular squids, and in situ submersible observations reveal strong locomotory abilities relative to other deep-water squids.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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