Aquarium glossary

Osmoregulation

Salt + water balance in fish
DefinitionOsmoregulation is how fish maintain internal salt and water balance against their environment. Freshwater fish constantly absorb water and excrete dilute urine; marine fish lose water and drink to compensate.

In depth

Osmoregulation drives why marine + freshwater fish cannot swap habitats. Freshwater fish: blood is saltier than surrounding water - water flows IN through gills + skin osmotically. They produce large volumes of dilute urine + actively absorb sodium/chloride at the gills. Marine fish: blood is less salty than seawater - water flows OUT. They drink seawater, secrete chloride at the gills via chloride cells, and produce small amounts of concentrated urine. Hyposalinity treatment: exploits this - lowering salinity to 12 ppt for 14 days disrupts marine ich osmotic balance while teleost fish tolerate. Brackish species (mollies, scats, monos): tolerate intermediate salinity by switching osmoregulation modes. Why salt baths work for FW fish: 3% salinity for 5 minutes draws water OUT of parasites, dehydrating them while the fish copes briefly. Stress signs: rapid breathing, mucus overproduction, lethargy after water-quality crashes - all signal osmotic stress.

Reviewed by the Fast Aquatics husbandry team · Updated May 2026

Related

Full glossary · Q&A library · Calculators · Disease database