Osmosis:
Diffusion from an area of high water concentration to low.
Movement of water from low osmotic pressure to high.
Osmotic Pressure:
Hydrostatic pressure that counterbalances the osmotic movement of water.
Hyperosmotic:
Low solute concentration.
Hyposmotic:
High solute concentration.
Understanding water balance is crucial because:
Concentration of free water outside cells can affect cell structure.
Cells may swell if excess water flows in.
Total Body Mass Distribution:
Female: 45% solids, 55% fluids (2/3 intracellular fluid, 1/3 extracellular fluid).
Male: 40% solids, 60% fluids.
20% of ECF is plasma.
Euryhaline Animals:
Tolerate a wide range of salt concentrations (e.g., migratory fish).
Stenohaline Animals:
Tolerate a narrow range of salt concentrations (e.g., amphibian larvae).
Osmoregulators:
Maintain internal fluid composition regardless of surroundings.
Osmoconformers:
Conform to osmotic pressure of surroundings.
Ionoconformers:
Concentration of all ions same inside and out.
Ionoregulators:
Concentration of some ions differs inside and out (common in vertebrate fish).
Kidney:
Primary organ for osmoregulation in vertebrates.
Functions to remove excess water, salts, and solutes.
Nephron is the functional unit for urine production.
U/P Ratio: osmotic pressure of urine/osmotic pressure of plasma.
Implications for Excretion:
U/P=1 (isosmotic urine):
Water & solutes are excreted in same relation as blood plasma.
U/P<1 (hyposmotic urine):
Water is preferentially excreted.
U/P>1 (hyperosmotic urine):
Water is held back; solutes are preferentially excreted.
Freshwater animals are typically hyperosmotic regulators:
Problems:
Gain excess water from high internal solute concentration.
Lose ions/salts to lower concentration in environment.
Solutions:
Produce dilute urine.
Ion uptake in gills (requires ATP).
Marine Teleost Fish:
Hyposmotic regulators.
Problems:
Water loss due to high solute concentration externally.
Gain salt due to sea water.
Solutions:
Drink sea water.
Active transport via gills to excrete salt.
Produce concentrated salty urine.
Euryhaline Fish:
Can tolerate wide solute concentration ranges (e.g., migratory spawning).
Produce isosmotic or slightly hyperosmotic urine.
Use salt glands for excess salt excretion (active transport of NaCl).
Produce hyperosmotic urine.
Obtain water primarily from food sources without salt glands.
Problem: Urea can denature proteins.
Solution: Urea balances water influx, TMAO counters negative effects.
Excess salts removed via rectal salt glands.
Behavior: First line of defense.
Humidic Animals: Restricted to humid environments.
Xeric Animals: Capable of living in dry areas.
Caused by: Evaporation, urine, feces, secretions.
Caused by: Drinking, consuming food, specialized surfaces, metabolic processes.
Cutaneous Water Loss: Through skin; permeability differs among species.
Respiratory Water Loss: Minimized by internal structures (e.g., elaborate nasal passages).
Problem: Water is essential for excreting many ions.
Solutions:
Concentrate urine (most efficient in mammals).
Reduce nitrogenous waste in urine:
Ammonia (fish) - highly toxic.
Urea (amphibians & mammals) - medium toxicity.
Uric Acid (reptiles & birds) - low toxicity, insoluble.
Tied to water throughout their life cycle:
Hyperosmotic when in water, combat water gain by diluting urine and active salt transport.
Away from water, use a bladder for water retention.
Behavioral adaptations (e.g., exploiting rain storms).
Rapid development in temporary pools, waxy skin reduces water loss.
Manage intake through food, drinking, and metabolic water production.
Avoid desiccation via behavior (e.g., uric acid production).
Increased mobility solves many water management issues.
Produce uric acid waste, higher tolerance to water loss.
Utilize various strategies:
Concentrated urine production.
Oily skin, high-water food consumption.
Specialized respiratory structures, fur, and metabolic water production.