Sustained branchial apnea in the Australian short‐finned eel, Anguilla australis

Abstract
Branchial and cutaneous O2 uptake as well as branchial ventilatory stroke volume and frequency were measured by twin‐chamber respirometry in conscious unoperated eels (Anguilla australis) at 20°C. The branchial ventilatory pattern comprised alternating periods of apnea and eupnea, together constituting a “Standard Breathing Cycle” (SBC = 1 apneic period plus the ensuing period of eupnea). SBC time in 17 eels averaged 15.5 min of which only 23% was devoted to eupnea. Reduction of the PO2 of inspired water from 155 to 80 torr significantly increased the proportion of time devoted to eupnea to 49% of SBC time without significantly changing SBC time. Absolute cutaneous O2 uptake (5.8 ml O2·h−1·kg−1) was largely independent of the frequency or occurrence of eupnea, with the relative contribution of the skin to total O2 uptake averaging 47%. The histological appearance of the skin in A. australis is very similar to that described in A. anguilla: eel skin is only poorly vascularized. It was concluded that the skin may contribute to O2 requirements other than its own, and that this adaptation is a consequence of the unusual intermittent pattern of gill ventilation.