Avoidance and tolerance of freezing in ectothermic vertebrates

Author:

Costanzo Jon P.1,Lee Richard E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056, USA

Abstract

Summary Ectothermic vertebrates have colonized regions that are seasonally or perpetually cold, and some species, particularly terrestrial hibernators, must cope with temperatures that fall substantially below 0°C. Survival of such excursions depends on either freeze avoidance through supercooling or freeze tolerance. Supercooling, a metastable state in which body fluids remain liquid below the equilibrium freezing/melting point, is promoted by physiological responses that protect against chilling injury and by anatomical and behavioral traits that limit risk of inoculative freezing by environmental ice and ice-nucleating agents. Freeze tolerance evolved from responses to fundamental stresses to permit survival of the freezing of a substantial amount of body water under thermal and temporal conditions of ecological relevance. Survival of freezing is promoted by a complex suite of molecular, biochemical and physiological responses that limit cell death from excessive shrinkage, damage to macromolecules and membranes, metabolic perturbation and oxidative stress. Although freeze avoidance and freeze tolerance generally are mutually exclusive strategies, a few species can switch between them, the mode used in a particular instance of chilling depending on prevailing physiological and environmental conditions.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference52 articles.

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3. The Schrenck newt (Salamandrella schrenckii, Amphibia, Caudata, Hynobiidae) is the second amphibian that withstands extremely low temperatures;Berman;Dokl. Biol. Sci.,2010

4. To freeze or not to freeze? Invertebrate survival of sub-zero temperatures;Block;Funct. Ecol.,1991

5. Supercooling and ice nucleation in vertebrates;Costanzo,1995

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