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American Zoologist 2001 41(4):795-806; doi:10.1093/icb/41.4.795
© 2001 by The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology
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Role of Behavior in Meeting Osmotic Challenges1

Thomas G. Wolcott2,1 and Donna L. Wolcott1
1 Department of Marine, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Box 8208, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-8208

Biologists must remember that physiology is the product of natural selection on organisms interacting with heterogeneous environments. "Behaving" organisms may alter the osmotic conditions they experience and achieve results unexpected from laboratory studies. Their ability to exploit environmental heterogeneity depends on its temporal/spatial scale relative to that of the organism, and the correspondence between the osmotic differences and the organism's sensory and osmoregulatory physiology. "Behaviors" include evasion of stressful habitats, selection among differing microenvironments, changing body characteristics that affect salt/water uptake/loss, manipulating fluids differing in osmolytes, and modification of osmotic microenvironments (especially for vulnerable offspring). To draw "comparative and integrative" inferences, investigators must strive to understand an organism's actual challenges by "seeing" the world from its perspective, and then making observations and performing experiments in the context of the "real world" experienced by that organism.


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