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Water Balance & Osmoregulation

Life & Water

Water Balance & Osmoregulation

Useful Vocabulary to Remember
  • 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.

Importance of Water Balance
  • 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.

Tolerance to Varying Habitats

  • 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).

Osmoregulation Strategies

  • 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).

Osmoregulatory Organs

  • Kidney:

  • Primary organ for osmoregulation in vertebrates.

  • Functions to remove excess water, salts, and solutes.

  • Nephron is the functional unit for urine production.

Analyzing Urine: Osmotic U/P Ratios

  • 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 Osmoregulators

  • 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 Osmoregulators

  • 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).

Marine Reptiles & Birds

  • Produce isosmotic or slightly hyperosmotic urine.

  • Use salt glands for excess salt excretion (active transport of NaCl).

Marine Mammals

  • Produce hyperosmotic urine.

  • Obtain water primarily from food sources without salt glands.

Osmoconformers: Elasmobranchs (Sharks & Rays)

  • Problem: Urea can denature proteins.

  • Solution: Urea balances water influx, TMAO counters negative effects.

  • Excess salts removed via rectal salt glands.

Water Balance on Land

  • Behavior: First line of defense.

  • Humidic Animals: Restricted to humid environments.

  • Xeric Animals: Capable of living in dry areas.

Water Loss on Land
  • Caused by: Evaporation, urine, feces, secretions.

Water Gain on Land
  • Caused by: Drinking, consuming food, specialized surfaces, metabolic processes.

Evaporative Water Loss
  • Cutaneous Water Loss: Through skin; permeability differs among species.

  • Respiratory Water Loss: Minimized by internal structures (e.g., elaborate nasal passages).

Excretory Water Loss

  • Problem: Water is essential for excreting many ions.

  • Solutions:

  1. Concentrate urine (most efficient in mammals).

  2. Reduce nitrogenous waste in urine:

    • Ammonia (fish) - highly toxic.

    • Urea (amphibians & mammals) - medium toxicity.

    • Uric Acid (reptiles & birds) - low toxicity, insoluble.

Physiological Regulation for Amphibians

  • 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.

Adaptations for Hot/Dry Habitats
  • Behavioral adaptations (e.g., exploiting rain storms).

  • Rapid development in temporary pools, waxy skin reduces water loss.

Water Management in Reptiles

  • Manage intake through food, drinking, and metabolic water production.

  • Avoid desiccation via behavior (e.g., uric acid production).

Water Management in Birds

  • Increased mobility solves many water management issues.

  • Produce uric acid waste, higher tolerance to water loss.

Water Management in Mammals

  • Utilize various strategies:

  • Concentrated urine production.

  • Oily skin, high-water food consumption.

  • Specialized respiratory structures, fur, and metabolic water production.