Publication | Open Access
Osmoregulation in <i>Dreissena polymorpha</i>: the Importance of Na, Cl, K, and Particularly Mg
66
Citations
18
References
1994
Year
BiologyHydrobiologyOsmotic StressBiochemistryBlood Mg ConcentrationParticularly MgNatural SciencesPhysiologyBiomineralizationZebra MusselsWater BiologyWater QualityMg ConcentrationAquatic OrganismChemical Biology
Zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) are unusual in that they cannot survive in Mg-deficient water. Analysis of blood samples from mussels obtained in the field indicated a Mg concentration of 1.5-2.0 mM immediately after animal collection. However, Mg concentration in the blood decreased rapidly when the mussels were transferred to Mg-free artificial pondwater (PW); the t1/2 was 24 h. Blood Mg decreased to the limits of detection within 2 weeks, and the time to 50% mortality was about 17 days in Mg-free PW. When Mg-depleted specimens of D. polymorpha were returned to PW containing Mg, the net flux was 3 μmol Mg (g dry tissue.h)-1, and blood Mg concentration was restored within a day to 0.4-0.6 mM. Mussels depleted of Mg did not survive beyond 51 days. When mussels were acclimated to K-free pondwater (containing Mg), their osmoregulatory ability was impaired, and the total solute of the blood dropped from 30-36 to 21-24 mosm, with blood Na and Cl concentrations declining 30-50%. This ion-depleted condition was reversed within 45 h upon return of K to the pondwater bathing medium. D. polymorpha individuals were unable to survive beyond 5 days in deionized water and required minimal concentrations of Na, Cl, K, and Mg for prolonged storage (>51 days) under laboratory conditions. Mussels survived Ca-deficient solutions for more than 51 days, presumably because they were able to mobilize Ca from internal stores (shell) to maintain blood calcium at 1 mM.
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