“…Previous studies have reported on the mechanisms of osmoregulation acclimation or habitat changes in fish, such as Salmonids (Boeuf, ; Folmar Lc, ), green sturgeon (Allen, Cech, & Kultz, ), European eels (Kalujnaia et al., ; Tseng & Hwang, ), cichlid fish (Febry, ; Whitehead, ; Xia et al., ) and also in mammals, e.g., the riverine odontocetes (Caballero, Duchene, Garavito, Slikas, & Baker, ), the killer whales (Orcinus orca) (Foote et al., ). Some genes were reported to associate with osmoregulation acclimation in fish, such as the COX1 of Glyptosternoid fish in China (Ma, Kang, Chen, Zhou, & He, ) and NADH Dehydrogenase genes and cytochrome b of the schizothoracine fish (Cyprinidae) (Li et al., ). In tilapia, some osmoregulation associated genes have been identified, such as transferrin gene, β ‐Hemoglobin , Ca2+transporting plasma membrane ATPase , pro‐opiomelanocortin, beta‐actin (Rengmark & Lingaas, ), prolactin (Streelman & Kocher, ).…”