Storey, K.B., Storey, J.M. and Churchill, T.A. 2007.
Freezing and anoxia tolerance of slugs: a metabolic perspective. J. Comp.
Physiol. B 177, 833-840.
DOI: 10.1007/s00360-007-0179-y
Freezing and
anoxia tolerance of slugs: a metabolic perspective.
Kenneth
B. Storey, Janet M. Storey and Thomas A. Churchill
Abstract
Freezing
survival was assessed in three species of terrestrial slugs, a holarctic but native North
American species, Deroceras laeve, and two species introduced from Europe, D. reticulatum and Arion
circumscriptus. The introduced species showed
very poor freezing survival. Supercooling points of the introduced species were
quite high (about -3°C) and their freezing survival was very poor, limited to
short-term freezing at -1.2 to -1.5°C and low ice contents (23–44%). D.
laeve showed a significant elevation of supercooling point between slugs
collected in the autumn (-4.8°C + 0.5) and those collected early in the spring
(-3.1°C + 0.4). This species also showed substantial freezing survival
which was greater for spring-collected slugs (100% survival of 1 h freezing at -2°C
with an ice content of 65%) than for autumn animals (100% survival for 1 h at -1°C
with ~40% ice). Carbohydrate and amino acid responses to freezing and anoxia
exposures were compared in the two Deroceras species. D. laeve showed
a strong hyperglycemic response to freezing, a 100-fold increase in glucose
levels that suggested that glucose may have a cryoprotective function in this
species. D. reticulatum did not accumulate glucose and neither species
produced glycerol or lactate. Both species showed typical responses to anoxia (aspartate and glutamate catabolism, alanine and succinate
accumulation) and D. laeve also showed this pattern during freezing,
suggesting a natural switch to anaerobiosis to support freezing survival.