Abstract
The numbers of mucous cells in the epidermis of the head and body and in the surface of the gill arch of the amphibious blenny, Blennius pholis L., were estimated on fish immersed in sea water and after 4 h aerial exposure. During emersion there appeared to be a considerable reduction in the frequency of epithelial mucous cells in the areas studied, although counts for the head epidermis were somewhat variable. A concomitant decline in the number of cells thought to be actively secreting was also recorded in tissue samples from both the head and gills, while in the body epidermis the potential for mucus‐secretion was maintained close to the levels observed in immersed fish.Histochemical studies revealed epidermal mucous cells containing either sialylated acid mucopolysaccharides or neutral mucins, or a mixture of these, in both the head and the body, whereas in the gill arch epithelia there were, in addition, cells containing sulphated acid mucopolysaccharides. After emersion, a disproportionate loss of cells containing neutral and sialylated mucus from the gill epithelia resulted in an increase in the proportion of secreting cells staining positively for sulphated acid mucopolysaccharides.The results of this study are discussed in relation to nitrogenous excretion during aerial exposure.
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