Abstract

1. The euryhaline fish Fundulus heteroclitus has an incipient lethal pH between 3.75 and 4.0 in fresh water. 2. Fish exposed to pH 3.5 in sea water or fresh water died in about 3 hr, and had greatly elevated or depressed body sodium concentrations, respectively. The direction and degree of change in body sodium level depended on the sodium diffusion gradient between the environment and the fish. This is the first time that the death of fish in sea water at low pH has been shown to be associated with hypernatremia. 3. Yet, sodium fluxes during the first hour of exposure to pH 3.5 in water of 3.5 or 35 ppt salinity were not different from controls, and body and plasma sodium concentration did not change during 2hr exposure to pH 3.5. This initial insensitivity of gill sodium regulation to blockage by low pH is quite different from the response of previously studied freshwater fish. 4. The degree of acid tolerance displayed by F. heteroclitus is surprising considering its estuarine habits. This paradoxical tolerance appears to be a secondary consequence of its ability to adjust sodium balance in relation to rapid changes in salinity.

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