Las Vegas Review-Journal

Fish story amazes researcher­s

- By HENRY BREAN

LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

Here’s a fish story for you: Five years ago, researcher­s at UNLV launched what they expected to be a simple, oneweek study of the endangered Devil’s Hole pupfish. What they netted instead was a metabolic mystery that seems to defy the rules of biology.

It turns out the tiny fish found only in a single water-filled cavern 90 miles west of Las Vegas can survive for two hours or more without breathing any oxygen at all.

Rare species ignores available oxygen

And stranger still: The pupfish will go without oxygen even when it’s plentiful around them, using instead an alternate method of generating energy that takes a toll on their tiny bodies much the way alcoholism damages the human liver.

The fish aren’t holding their breath, exactly. It’s more like what happens in humans when they sprint — that extra burst of anaerobic energy that makes the muscles burn.

But pupfish can keep their internal sprint going for as long as 149 minutes without showing any outward sign of strain.

UNLV researcher­s Frank Van Breukelen and Stanley Hillyard call the phenomenon “paradoxica­l anaerobism” and, as the name suggests, it defies explanatio­n.

“The pupfish’s extended time not consuming oxygen makes no sense, since oxygen is so much more efficient, and these pupfish live in an incredibly energy-deprived environmen­t,” Van Breukelen said. “It’s silly.”

The water in Devil’s Hole is thermally heated to about 93 degrees and carries barely enough dissolved oxygen to support life. The pupfish found there and no place else on Earth have been under federal protection since 1967, but their numbers have dwindled to less than 100, prompting concern that extinction is imminent and unavoidabl­e.

Van Breukelen and company offer no prediction­s one way or the other, but their findings could be evidence of evolution in progress.

At the end of the last ice age some 10,000 years ago, the bottom of Death Valley was covered by a vast, cool-water lake as deep as 300 feet. As the lake and its tributarie­s dried up, the surviving fish species were forced into isolated, spring-fed pockets across the desert. Van Breukelen suspects paradoxica­l anaerobism is an accidental biological reaction to that dramatic change in habitat.

He and Hillyard originally set out with a simple goal: measure pupfish oxygen use to better understand the energy needs of the species. Then their experiment took an unexpected turn.

“It started by accident actually. We were measuring oxygen consumptio­n, and all of a sudden there was no oxygen consumptio­n,” Van Breukelen said. “I saw some crazy stuff in the data, and it just blew up from there.”

One week of study turned into several years, he said, as hundreds “if not thousands of fish” — all of them close relatives of the species in Devil’s Hole — were tested in hopes of understand­ing paradoxica­l anaerobism, what triggers it and what causes it to stop.

“It took us forever to do this,” Van Breukelen said. “When you’re going against (scientific) dogma, you have to have a whole lot of data to back you up.”

Water temperatur­e seems to play a major role, with the phenomenon occurring far more frequently in warmer conditions. Since Devil’s Hole is particular­ly warm, researcher­s suspect the fish there might rely on the unusual metabolic process quite a bit. As a result, the pupfish are likely being exposed to more of the main byproduct of paradoxica­l anaerobism: ethanol. Or, in layman’s terms, that stuff in your cocktail that makes you feel funny.

Van Breukelen said high ethanol exposure could help explain why Devil’s Hole pupfish only live six to nine months while similar springfish can live as long as four years.

“They are essentiall­y living like chronic alcoholics,” he said.

Hillyard presented a paper on the findings at the 2015 Experiment­al Biology conference in Boston in March, but the research isn’t over.

Eventually, the researcher­s hope to venture out of the lab and into the desert near the Nevada-California border so they can measure oxygen consumptio­n by Devil’s Hole pupfish in their namesake habitat.

With any luck, that work can be done quickly and easily. But Van Breukelen isn’t holding his breath. Contact Henry Brean at hbrean@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0350. Find him on Twitter @Refried Brean.

 ?? MARTIN S. FUENTES/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL ?? Associate Professor Frank van Breukelen observes pupfish tanks Wednesday at the Life Sciences building on the UNLV campus.
MARTIN S. FUENTES/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL Associate Professor Frank van Breukelen observes pupfish tanks Wednesday at the Life Sciences building on the UNLV campus.
 ?? Martin s. fuentes/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL ?? Pupfish used for research are shown Wednesday at the Life Sciences building at UNLV. Researcher­s have found the species often will not use oxygen for two hours at a time.
Martin s. fuentes/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL Pupfish used for research are shown Wednesday at the Life Sciences building at UNLV. Researcher­s have found the species often will not use oxygen for two hours at a time.

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