Author:
Allison Vanessa,Dunham David W.,Harvey Harold H.
Abstract
In a relatively acid-tolerant crayfish, Cambarus bartoni, locomotory response to food, and associated antennular flicking, were tested at both a circumneutral and a sublethal acid pH. Crayfish were run through a Y maze at pH 7.5, 4.5, and again at 7.5. One arm of the Y maze contained food; the other did not. The time to complete the maze at pH 4.5 increased significantly compared with the time taken at pH 7.5 (P < 0.001). Once pH was restored to 7.5, the time to complete the maze was greater than the initial control at pH 7.5 (P < 0.001) but less than pH 4.5 (P < 0.05). At pH 7.5, 73% of the crayfish chose the food arm; at pH 4.5, 33% chose the food arm; and when pH was returned to 7.5, 46% chose the food arm. Antennular flicking frequency was greatest at pH 7.5 and significantly less at 4.0 (P < 0.0001). Once pH was restored to 7.5, flicking rates were significantly lower than those in the first trial at pH 7.5 (P < 0.01), but significantly greater than those at pH 4.0. Decreased antennular flicking and possible avoidance of food at a sublethal pH (4.0) imply that either chemoreception of food cues or normal central processing of chemical input is seriously impaired.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
26 articles.
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