Abstract

The Humboldt (jumbo) squid, Dosidicus gigas, is a part-time resident of the permanent oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) in the Eastern Tropical Pacific and, thereby, it encounters oxygen levels below its critical oxygen partial pressure. To better understand the ventilatory mechanisms that accompany the process of metabolic suppression in these top oceanic predators, we exposed juvenile D. gigas to the oxygen levels found in the OMZ (1% O(2), 1 kPa, 10 °C) and measured metabolic rate, activity cycling patterns, swimming mode, escape jet (burst) frequency, mantle contraction frequency and strength, stroke volume and oxygen extraction efficiency. In normoxia, metabolic rate varied between 14 and 29 μmol O(2) g(-1) wet mass h(-1), depending on the level of activity. The mantle contraction frequency and strength were linearly correlated and increased significantly with activity level. Additionally, an increase in stroke volume and ventilatory volume per minute was observed, followed by a mantle hyperinflation process during high activity periods. Squid metabolic rate dropped more than 75% during exposure to hypoxia. Maximum metabolic rate was not achieved under such conditions and the metabolic scope was significantly decreased. Hypoxia changed the relationship between mantle contraction strength and frequency from linear to polynomial with increasing activity, indicating that, under hypoxic conditions, the jumbo squid primarily increases the strength of mantle contraction and does not regulate its frequency. Under hypoxia, jumbo squid also showed a larger inflation period (reduced contraction frequency) and decreased relaxed mantle diameter (shortened diffusion pathway), which optimize oxygen extraction efficiency (up to 82%/34%, without/with consideration of 60% potential skin respiration). Additionally, they breathe 'deeply', with more powerful contractions and enhanced stroke volume. This deep-breathing behavior allows them to display a stable ventilatory volume per minute, and explains the maintenance of the squid's cycling activity under such O(2) conditions. During hypoxia, the respiratory cycles were shorter in length but increased in frequency. This was accompanied by an increase in the number of escape jets during active periods and a faster switch between swimming modes. In late hypoxia (onset ~170 ± 10 min), all the ventilatory processes were significantly reduced and followed by a lethargic state, a behavior that seems closely associated with the process of metabolic suppression and enables the squid to extend its residence time in the OMZ.

Highlights

  • IntroductionDosidicus gigas (jumbo or Humboldt squid) is the largest ommastrephid squid (up to 2.5 m length and 50 kg in mass) (Nesis, 1983) and has one the highest metabolic rates of any animal in the ocean (Rosa and Seibel, 2008)

  • Dosidicus gigas is the largest ommastrephid squid (Nesis, 1983) and has one the highest metabolic rates of any animal in the ocean (Rosa and Seibel, 2008)

  • To better understand the ventilatory mechanisms that accompany the process of metabolic suppression in these top oceanic predators, we exposed juvenile D. gigas to the oxygen levels found in the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) (1% O2, 1 kPa, 10°C) and measured metabolic rate, activity cycling patterns, swimming mode, escape jet frequency, mantle contraction frequency and strength, stroke volume and oxygen extraction efficiency

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Summary

Introduction

Dosidicus gigas (jumbo or Humboldt squid) is the largest ommastrephid squid (up to 2.5 m length and 50 kg in mass) (Nesis, 1983) and has one the highest metabolic rates of any animal in the ocean (Rosa and Seibel, 2008). It is endemic to the Eastern Pacific, and abundant in the highly productive waters of the California and Peru Current systems (Nigmatullin et al, 2001) and the Costa Rica Dome (Ichii et al, 2002; Waluda and Rodhouse, 2006), where it plays a crucial role both as prey (Clarke and Paliza, 2001; Abitía-Cárdenas et al, 2002; Ruiz-Cooley et al, 2004) and predator (Markaida and Sosa-Nishizaki, 2003). In addition to its ecological role, the Humboldt squid is an economically important species and the target of the world’s largest cephalopod fishing industry (Rodhouse et al, 2006). One might expect that the presence of active, muscular squid in these hypoxic zones would be precluded, as, in other active squid: (i) the primary mode of locomotion, jet propulsion, is energetically inefficient (Webber et al, 2000); (ii) the oxygen-carrying capacity is limitative relative to that of fishes, requiring that cephalopods use most of the O2 in the blood on each

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