A multi-tasking stomach: functional coexistence of acid–peptic digestion and defensive body inflation in three distantly related vertebrate lineages

Author:

Ferreira P.123ORCID,Kwan G. T.4ORCID,Haldorson S.1,Rummer J. L.5ORCID,Tashiro F.6,Castro L. F. C.27ORCID,Tresguerres M.4ORCID,Wilson J. M.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology and Laurier Institute for Water Science, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, ON, Canada

2. Interdisciplinary Centre for Marine and Environmental Research, University of Porto, Matosinhos, Portugal

3. Abel Salazar Institute of Biomedical Sciences, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal

4. Marine Biology Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, USA

5. College of Science and Engineering and ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia

6. Fisheries Science Centre, The Hokkaido University Museum, Hokkaido, Japan

7. Faculty of Sciences, University of Porto, Portugal

Abstract

Puffer and porcupine fishes (families Diodontidae and Tetraodontidae, order Tetradontiformes) are known for their extraordinary ability to triple their body size by swallowing and retaining large amounts of seawater in their accommodating stomachs. This inflation mechanism provides a defence to predation; however, it is associated with the secondary loss of the stomach's digestive function. Ingestion of alkaline seawater during inflation would make acidification inefficient (a potential driver for the loss of gastric digestion), paralleled by the loss of acid–peptic genes. We tested the hypothesis of stomach inflation as a driver for the convergent evolution of stomach loss by investigating the gastric phenotype and genotype of four distantly related stomach inflating gnathostomes: sargassum fish, swellshark, bearded goby and the pygmy leatherjacket. Strikingly, unlike in the puffer/porcupine fishes, we found no evidence for the loss of stomach function in sargassum fish, swellshark and bearded goby. Only the pygmy leatherjacket (Monochanthidae, Tetraodontiformes) lacked the gastric phenotype and genotype. In conclusion, ingestion of seawater for inflation, associated with loss of gastric acid secretion, is restricted to the Tetraodontiformes and is not a selective pressure for gastric loss in other reported gastric inflating fishes.

Funder

Ontario graduate Scholarship

Canadian Network for Research and Innovation in Machining Technology, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Graduate Research Fellowship

Canada Foundation for Innovation

NSF

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference48 articles.

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