The aquatic urodeles Ambystoma tigrinum and Necturus maculosus responded to hypercapnia quite differently. A. tigrinum, after 2-h exposure to 22 Torr partial pressure of CO2 (PCO2), decreased arterial pH (pHa) from 7.85 to 7.32 and increased arterial pressure of CO2 (PaCO2) to 26 Torr. Plasma [HCO-3] [( HCO-3]pl) remained constant at about 17 mM. Prolonged exposure (24 h) led to a 26% extracellular compensation as pHa rose to 7.46 while [HCO-3]pl increased to 24 mM. Plasma [K+] increased and [Cl-] decreased while [Na+] remained unchanged. Recovery in normocapnic water reversed these changes. N. maculosus did not display similar compensatory changes. Two-hour exposure to 17 Torr PCO2 resulted in a decline of pHa from 7.66 to 7.24, which was not compensated (pHa = 7.19) after 24 h. There were no significant changes in plasma [Na+], [K+], [Cl-], or [HCO-3]. The pHa decline reversed after recovery in normocapnic water, however. The fact that compensation for hypercapnic in A. tigrinum was accompanied by changes in Cl- and K+ concentrations may indicate the participation of epithelial transport mechanisms involving these ions in acid-base balance.
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