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1.
The Pacific tarpon is an elopomorph teleost fish with an air-breathing organ (ABO) derived from a physostomous gas bladder. Oxygen partial pressure (PO2) in the ABO was measured on juveniles (238 g) with fiber-optic sensors during exposure to selected aquatic PO2 and swimming speeds. At slow speed (0.65 BL s−1), progressive aquatic hypoxia triggered the first breath at a mean PO2 of 8.3 kPa. Below this, opercular movements declined sharply and visibly ceased in most fish below 6 kPa. At aquatic PO2 of 6.1 kPa and swimming slowly, mean air-breathing frequency was 0.73 min−1, ABO PO2 was 10.9 kPa, breath volume was 23.8 ml kg−1, rate of oxygen uptake from the ABO was 1.19 ml kg−1 min−1, and oxygen uptake per breath was 2.32 ml kg−1. At the fastest experimental speed (2.4 BL s−1) at 6.1 kPa, ABO oxygen uptake increased to about 1.90 ml kg−1 min−1, through a variable combination of breathing frequency and oxygen uptake per breath. In normoxic water, tarpon rarely breathed air and apparently closed down ABO perfusion, indicated by a drop in ABO oxygen uptake rate to about 1% of that in hypoxic water. This occurred at a wide range of ABO PO2 (1.7–26.4 kPa), suggesting that oxygen level in the ABO was not regulated by intrinsic receptors.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Epidermal conductances for water vapour transfer(gep), water vapour efflux(E), and net photosynthetic CO2 uptake (P N ) through adaxial and abaxial leaf surfaces were estimated, simultaneously during the development of water stress in primary leaves ofPhaseolus vulgaris L. Hydration level was characterized by water saturation deficit (ΔW sat ), water potential (Τ w ), osmotic potential (Τ8) and pressure potential (Τp). The conductance of the abaxial epidermis was consistently greater than that of the adaxial epidermis, but the response of both surfaces to the increase in water stress corresponded: with increasing water stress epidermal conductances slightly increased, reached a plateau and then sharply decreased (at a rate of about 1.10x10-6 cm s-1 Pa-1 and 1.55x10-6 cm s-1 Pa-1 of Τw for adaxial and abaxial epidemics, respectively) to very low value. The curves expressing relationship between epidermal conductances and Δ Wsat, Τw, Τs, as well as Τp were of a similar character. E and PN through adaxial and abaxial surfaces were practically not affected until water stress reached the “critical” value (Τw from — 8.2 to — 9.2 x 105 Pa). With further increase in water deficit, however, they sharply decreased. The “critical” value of Τw was the same for both leaf surfaces.  相似文献   

4.
Synopsis Oxygen uptake (VO2) during graded hypoxia, rate of hypoxia acclimation, breathing frequency (fR), breath volume (VS, R) and gill ventilation (VG) were measured in Hoplias malabaricus. Normoxia and hypoxia acclimated fish had similar and constant VO2 and VG in a range of water PO2 from 150 to 25 mmHg. Hypoxia acclimated fish showed significantly higher VO2 in severe hypoxia (PO2 <15 mmHg). Normoxia acclimated fish showed symptoms similar to hypoxic coma after 1 h of exposure to water PO2 of 10 mmHg whereas the same symptoms were observed only at PO2 of 5 mmHg for fish acclimated to hypoxia. Fish required 14 days to achieve full acclimation to hypoxia (PO2 ≥25 mmHg). Lowering of water PO2 from 150 to 25 mmHg resulted in normoxic fish showing a 3–2 fold increase in VG. The increase was the result of an elevation in VS, R rather than fR. Among normoxia acclimated specimens, small fish showed a higher VG per unit weight than the large ones in both normoxia (PO2 =150 mmHg) and hypoxia (PO2 = 15 mmHg). A decrease in the ventilatory requirement (VG/VO2) with increased body weight was recorded in hypoxia (PO2 = 15 mmHg).  相似文献   

5.
Streamside measurements of critical thermal maxima (Tcrit), swimming performance (Ucrit), and routine (Rr) and maximum (Rmax) metabolic rates were performed on three populations of genetically distinct redband trout Oncorhynchus mykiss in the high‐desert region of south‐eastern Oregon. The Tcrit values (29·4 ± 0·1° C) for small (40–140 g) redband trout from the three streams, and large (400–1400 g) redband trout at Bridge Creek were not different, and were comparable to published values for other salmonids. At high water temperatures (24–28° C), large fish incurred higher metabolic costs and were more thermally sensitive than small fish. Ucrit(3·6 ± 0·1 LF s?1), Rr(200 ± 13 mg O2 kg?0·830 h?1) and metabolic power (533 ± 22 mg O2 kg?0·882 h?1) were not significantly different between populations of small redband trout at 24° C. Rmax and metabolic power, however, were higher than previous measurements for rainbow trout at these temperatures. Fish from Bridge Creek had a 30% lower minimum total cost of transport (Cmin), exhibited a lower refusal rate, and had smaller hearts than fish at 12‐mile or Rock Creeks. In contrast, no differences in Ucrit or metabolism were observed between the two size classes of redband trout, although Cmin was significantly lower for large fish at all swimming speeds. Biochemical analyses revealed that fish from 12‐mile Creek, which had the highest refusal rate (36%), were moderately hyperkalemic and had substantially lower circulating levels of free fatty acids, triglycerides and albumin. Aerobic and anaerobic enzyme activities in axial white muscle, however, were not different between populations, and morphological features were similar. Results of this study: 1) suggest that the physiological mechanisms that determine Tcrit in salmonids are highly conserved; 2) show that adult (large) redband trout are more susceptible to the negative affects of elevated temperatures than small redband trout; 3) demonstrate that swimming efficiency can vary considerably between redband trout populations; 4) suggest that metabolic energy stores correlate positively with swimming behaviour of redband trout at high water temperatures; 5) question the use of Tcrit for assessing physiological function and defining thermal habitat requirements of stream‐dwelling salmonids like the redband trout.  相似文献   

6.
Many diving insects collect a bubble of air from the surface to supply their oxygen requirements while submerged. It has been theorised that these air bubbles may also act as compressible gas gills, as the low oxygen partial pressure (PO2) within the bubble caused by the insect's respiration creates a gradient capable of driving the diffusion of oxygen from the water into the bubble. Under these conditions nitrogen diffuses in the opposite direction, resulting in a situation where the volume of the bubble is continually shrinking while oxygen is obtained. This study measures changes in volume and PO2 within the gas gills held by a tethered water bug, Agraptocorixa eurynome. Both gill volume and PO2 drop rapidly at the beginning of a dive, but eventually the PO2 reaches an apparently stable level while volume continually declines at a slower rate. Active ventilation of the gill is crucial to maintaining oxygen uptake. These measurements are used to calculate oxygen flux into the gas gill and the oxygen consumption rate of the bug. The effectiveness of a gas gill as a respiratory organ is also demonstrated by determining the critical PO2 of the water bug and comparing this with measured gas gill PO2 and calculated .  相似文献   

7.
To test whether the effects of feeding on swimming performance vary with acclimation temperature in juvenile southern catfish (Silurus meridionalis), we investigated the specific dynamic action (SDA) and swimming performance of fasting and feeding fish at acclimation temperatures of 15, 21, 27, and 33 °C. Feeding had no effect on the critical swimming speeding (Ucrit) of fish acclimated at 15 °C (p = 0.66), whereas it elicited a 12.04, 18.70, and 20.98% decrease in Ucrit for fish acclimated at 21, 27 and 33 °C, respectively (p < 0.05). Both the maximal postprandial oxygen consumption rate (VO2peak) and the active metabolic rate (VO2active, maximal aerobic sustainable metabolic rate of fasting fish) increased significantly with temperature (p < 0.05). The postprandial maximum oxygen consumption rates during swimming (VO2max) were higher than the VO2active of fasting fish at all temperature groups (p < 0.05). The VO2max increased with increasing temperature, but the relative residual metabolic scope (VO2max? VO2peak) during swimming decreased with increasing in temperature. The present study showed that the impairment of postprandial swimming performance increased with increasing temperature due to the unparalleled changes in the catfish's central cardio-respiratory, peripheral digestive and locomotory capacities. The different metabolic strategies of juvenile southern catfish at different temperatures may relate to changes in oxygen demand, imbalances in ion fluxes and dissolved oxygen levels with changes in temperature.  相似文献   

8.
Summary

The oxygen consumption rate (?O2) for Potamonauteus warreni Calman (= Potamon warreni (Calman) kept in 25 °C water was 34,4 μmol 1?1 O2 kg?1 and after 72 hours in 98% R.H. air the rate was 31,9 μmol 1?1 O2 kg?1 min?1. The ?O2 values for each of the two groups are not significantly different (P > 0,05). The partial oxygen tension of pre-branchial (v = venous) haemolymph (PvCO2) is 15,3 mm Hg in water and 13,0 mm Hg in air); partial carbon dioxide tension of pre-branchial (v) haemolymph (PvCO2) is 13,2 mm Hg in water and 13,0 mm Hg in air); the total carbon dioxide concentration in pre-branchial (v) haemolymph (CvCO2) tot. is 12,3 mmol 1?1 in air and 13,9 mmol 1?1 in water) are not significantly different for the two groups (P > 0,05). The haemolymph pH and the lactate concentration for crabs in water was found to be 7,51 and 0,38 mmol 1?1 respectively. No significant differences were found in pre-branchial haemolymph oxygen tension, carbon dioxide tension, total carbon dioxide content, haemolymph pH, lactate level, chloride concentration, P50 and haemocyanin-oxygen cooperativity in control crabs kept in water, and experimental crabs held in air for 72 hours. The chloride concentration, (327,0 mmol 1?1) for crabs kept in water does not differ from that of crabs held in air for 72 hours but is at least 15% higher than the sodium concentration (255 mmol 1?1) for crabs kept in water. The gill surface area is 520 mm2 g?1 wet body mass; on average 9,2 gill platelets (lamellae) can be found on a gill length of one millimetre. Each lamella is spaced 60–70 μm apart, each with a thickness of 30–40 μm. It is concluded that P. warreni may be described as a truly amphibious fresh-water crab.  相似文献   

9.
Ferrocene reacts with hexafluoroacetone trihydrate in refluxing octane to afford >80% yields of [CpFe(η5-C5H4C(CF3)2OH)] (X-ray), carrying out the reactions at 180 °C gives an additional 5% yield of [Fe(η5-C5H4C(CF3)2OH)2] (X-ray).The mono alcohol is lithiated with ButOK/BunLi/TMEDA affording partial conversion to mixtures of [CpFe(1,2-η5-C5H3C(CF3)2OH)(X)] and [Fe(η5-C5H4X)(1,2-η5-C5H3C(CF3)2OH)(X)] (X = SMe, CPh2OH) upon reaction with Me2S2 or OCPh2.For X = CPh2OH both structures are crystallographically characterised.Enantiopure [CpFe(1,2-η5-C5H3C(CF3)2OH)(SMe)] can be prepared from (R)-[CpFe(η5-C5H4S(O)C6H4Me)] via [CpFe(1,2-η5-C5H3S(O)C6H4Me)(C(CF3)2OH)] (X-ray) or [CpFe(1,2-η5-C5H3S(O)C6H4Me)(SMe)].Related procedures allow the preparation of [CpFe(1,2-η5-C5H3CPh2OH)(Y)] (Y = SMe, CHO (X-ray), C(CF3)2OH) and[CpFe(1,2-η5-C5H3C(CF3)2OH)(CHO)].  相似文献   

10.
Summary Responses to acute hypoxia were measured in skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis) and yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares) (1–3 kg body weight). Fish were prevented from making swimming movements by a spinal injection of lidocaine and were placed in front of a seawater delivery pipe to provide ram ventilation of the gills. Fish could set their own ventilation volumes by adjusting mouth gape. Heart rate, dorsal and ventral aortic blood pressures, and cardiac output were continuously monitored during normoxia (inhalant water (PO 2>150 mmHg) and three levels of hypoxia (inhalant water PO 2130, 90, and 50 mmHg). Water and blood samples were taken for oxygen measurements in fluids afferent and efferent to the gills. From these data, various measures of the effectiveness of oxygen transfer, and branchial and systemic vascular resistance were calculated. Despite high ventilation volumes (4–71·min-1·kg-1), tunas extract approximately 50% of the oxygen from the inhalant water, in part because high cardiac outputs (115–132 ml·min-1·kg-1) result in ventilation/perfusion conductance ratios (0.75–1.1) close to the theoretically ideal value of 1.0. Therefore, tunas have oxygen transfer factors (ml O2·min-1·mmHg-1·kg-1) that are 10–50 times greater than those of other fishes. The efficiency of oxygen transfer from water in tunas (65%) matches that measured in teleosts with ventilation volumes and order of magnitude lower. The high oxygen transfer factors of tunas are made possible, in part, by a large gill surface area; however, this appears to carry a considerable osmoregulatory cost as the metabolic rate of gills may account for up 70% of the total metabolism in spinally blocked (i.e., non-swimming) fish. During hypoxia, skipjack and yellowfin tunas show a decrease in heart rate and increase in ventilation volume, as do other teleosts. However, in tunas hypoxic bradycardia is not accompanied by equivalent increases, in stroke volume, and cardiac output falls as HR decreases. In both tuna species, oxygen consumption eventually must be maintained by drawing on substantial venous oxygen reserves. This occurs at a higher inhalant water PO2 (between 130 and 90 mmHg) in skipjack tuna than in yellowfin tuna (between 90 and 50 mmHg). The need to draw on venous oxygen reserves would make it difficult to meet the oxygen demand of increasing swimming speed, which is a common response to hypoxia in both species. Because yellowfin tuna can maintain oxygen consumption at a seawater oxygen tension of 90 mmHg without drawing on venous oxygen reserves, they could probably survive for extended periods at this level of hypoxia.Abbreviations BPda, BPva dorsal, ventral aortic blood pressure - C aO2, C vO2 oxygen content of arterial, venous blood - DO2 diffusion capacity - Eb, Ew effectiveness of O2 uptake by blood, and from water, respectively - Hct hematocrit - HR heart rate - PCO2 carbon dioxide tension - P aCO2, P vCO2 carbon dioxide tension of arterial and venous blood, respectively - PO2 oxygen tension - P aO2, P vO2, P iO2, P cO2 oxygen tension of arterial blood, venous blood, and inspired and expired water, respectively - pHa, pHv pH of arterial and venous blood, respectively - Pw—b effective water to blood oxygen partial pressure difference - Pg partial pressure (tension) gradient - cardiac output - R vascular resistance - SV stroke volume - SEM standard error of mean - TO2 transfer factor - U utilization - g ventilation volume - O2 oxygen consumption  相似文献   

11.
The effect of leaf dehydration on photosynthetic O2 exchange of potato (Solanum tuberosum L., cv. Haig) leaf discs was examined using 18O2 as a tracer and mass spectrometry. In normal air (350 μl·l?1CO2) and under an irradiance of 390 μmol photons·m?2·s1, a relative water deficit (RWD) of about 30% severely decreased net O2 evolution and increased O2 uptake by about 50%, thus indicating an enhancement of photorespiration. Increasing CO2 concentrations diminished O2 uptake and stimulated net O2 evolution both in well-hydrated and in dehydrated (RWD of about 30%) leaves. Much higher CO2 concentrations (up to 4%) were required to observe a complete effect of CO2 in dehydrated leaves. The chloroplastic CO2 concentration at the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco) level (Cc) was calculated from O2-exchange data in both well-hydrated and dehydrated leaves, assuming that the specificity factor of Rubisco was unaffected by desiccation. When plotting net O2 photosynthesis as a function of Cc, a similar relationship was obtained for well-hydrated and waterstressed leaf discs, thus showing that the main effect of water deficit is a decrease of the chloroplastic CO2 concentration. At saturating CO2 levels, the non-cyclic electron-transport rate, measured either as gross O2 photosynthesis or as the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio (Fm -Fs)/Fm, was insensitive to water deficit, provided RWD was below 40%. In this range of RWD, the decrease in gross O2 photosynthesis observed in normal air was attributed to the inability of oxidative processes to sustain the maximal electron-flow rate at low chloroplastic CO2 concentration. The maximal efficiency of photosystem II, estimated as the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio (Fm -F0)/Fm measured in dark-adapted leaves, was not affected by water deficits up to 60%.  相似文献   

12.
Antarctic marine organisms are considered to have extremely limited ability to respond to environmental temperature change. However, here we show that the Antarctic notothenioid fish Pagothenia borchgrevinki is an exception to this theory. P. borchgrevinki was able to acclimate its resting metabolic rate and resting ventilation frequency after a 5°C rise in temperature. Acute exposure to 4°C resulted in an elevation in metabolic rate (57.8 ± 4.79 mg O2 kg−1 h−1) and resting ventilation rate (40.38 ± 1.61 breaths min−1) compared with fish at −1°C (metabolic rate 34.45 ± 3.12 mg O2 kg−1 h−1; ventilation rate 29.88 ± 3.72 breaths min−1). However, after a 1-month acclimation period, there was no significant difference in the metabolic rate (cold fish 29.52 ± 3.01; warm fish 31.13 ± 2.30 mg O2 kg−1 h−1), or the resting ventilation rate (cold fish 28.75 ± 0.98; warm fish 34.25 ± 2.28 breaths min−1) of cold and warm acclimated fish. Acclimation changes to the rate of oxygen consumption following exhaustive exercise were complex. The pattern of oxygen consumption during recovery from exhaustive exercise was not significantly different in either cold or warm acclimated fish.  相似文献   

13.
In this study, heart rate (HR) bio-loggers were implanted in the abdominal cavity of 12 post-smolt Atlantic salmon Salmo salar weighing 1024 ± 31 g and acclimated to 12°C sea water. One week after the surgical procedure, a critical swim speed (Ucrit) test was performed on tagged and untagged conspecifics, whereafter tagged fish were maintained in their holding tanks for another week. The Ucrit was statistically similar between tagged and untagged fish (2.67 ± 0.04 and 2.74 ± 0.05 body lengths s−1, respectively) showing that the bio-logger did not compromise the swimming performance. In the pre-swim week, a diurnal cycle was apparent with HR peaking at 65 beats min−1 during the day and approaching 40 beats min−1 at night. In the Ucrit test, HR increased approximately exponentially with swimming speed until a plateau was reached at the final speed before fatigue with a maximum of 85.2 ± 0.7 beats min−1. During subsequent recovery tagged fish could be divided into a surviving group (N = 8) and a moribund group (N = 4). In surviving fish HR had fully recovered to pre-swim levels after 24 h, including reestablishment of a diurnal HR cycle. In moribund fish HR never recovered and remained elevated at c. 80 beats min−1 for 4 days, whereafter they started dying. We did not identify a proximal cause of death in moribund fish, but possible explanations are discussed. Tail beat frequency (TBF) was also measured and showed a more consistent response to increased swimming speeds. As such, when exploring correlations between HR, TBF and metabolic rates at different swimming speeds, TBF provides better predictions. On the contrary, HR measurements in free swimming fish over extended periods of time are useful for other purposes such as assessing the accumulative burden of various stressors and recovery trajectories from exhaustive exercise.  相似文献   

14.
A swim tunnel is to fish as a treadmill is to humans, and is a device used for indirect measuring of the metabolic rate. This study aims to explore the fish stress (if any) during the critical swimming test routines (fish handling, confinement, and swimming) using heart rate (fH, heartbeat per minute) bio-loggers in farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.). In addition, the recovery dynamics of exercised fish using fH were explored for 48 h post swim tests. Continuous fH data were acquired following the surgical implantation and throughout the trials, such as during fish handling, swim tests (critical swimming speed, Ucrit), and 48 h post swim tests. After 3 weeks of surgical recovery, fH stabilized at 46.20 ± 1.26 beats min−1, equalizing a ~38% reduction in fH recorded post-surgical tachycardia (74.13 ± 1.44 beats min−1). Interestingly, fH was elevated by ~200% compared to baseline levels not only due to the Ucrit (92.04 ± 0.23 beats min−1) but also due to fish handling and confinement in the swim tunnel, which was 66% above the baseline levels (77.48 ± 0.34 beats min−1), suggesting fish stress. Moreover, significantly higher plasma cortisol levels (199.56 ± 77.17 ng mL−1) corresponding to a ~300% increase compared to baseline levels (47.92 ± 27.70 ng mL−1) were identified after Ucrit, predicting post-swim test stress (physiological exhaustion). These findings reinforce the importance of fish acclimation in the swim tunnel prior to the swimming tests. However, fH dropped over the course of the 48-h post-swim test, but remained comparatively higher than the basal levels, suggesting fish should be given at least 48 h to recover from handling stress for better fish welfare. This study further explored the influence of fish tagging on Ucrit, which resulted in reduced swimming capabilities of tagged fish (1.95 ± 0.37 body lengths s−1) compared to untagged fish (2.54 ± 0.42 body length s−1), although this was not significant (p = 0.06), and therefore future tagging studies are warranted.  相似文献   

15.
Synopsis Oxygen uptake (Vo 2) was measured in carp of approximately 40 cm length swimming at controlled variable oxygen tensions (Po 2). At Po 2> 120 mm Hg Vo 2 increased with an increase in swimming speed from 5.6 to 11.3 cm · sec–1. Extrapolation of Vo 2 to zero activity at Po 2 = 140 mm Hg revealed a standard O2 uptake of 36.7 ml O2 · kg–1 · h–1 at 20° C. At the lowest swimming speed (5.6 cm · s–1) the oxygen uptake increased when the water Po 2 was reduced. A near doubling in Vo 2 was seen at Po 2 = 70 mm Hg compared to 140 mm Hg. At higher swimming speeds in hypoxic water Vo 2 decreased relative to the values at low swimming speeds. As a result the slope of the lines expressing log Vo 2 as a function of swimming speed decreased from positive to negative values with decreasing Po 2 of the water. pH of blood from the caudal vein drawn before and at termination of swimming at Po 2 = 70 mm Hg and 100 mm Hg did not show any decrease in relation to rest values at Po 2 = 140 mm Hg. Blood lactate concentration did not increase during swimming at these tensions.  相似文献   

16.
The molecular weight (Mw) and molecular-weight distribution of the extracellular polysaccharide xanthan, synthesized by the bacterium Xanthomonas campestris, have been determined from measurements of the sedimentation coefficient, s20,itw, and the intrinsic viscosity, [η], with the aid of the Mandelkern-Flory-Scheraga equation. The sedimentation coefficient of native xanthan was measured by band-sedimentation of polysaccharide molecules that had been tagged with a fluorescent group; the fluorescent label permits the use of very low concentrations of polymer. A typical, native-xanthan sample has Mw  15 x 106; the polydispersity index Mw/Mn is 2.8. Measurement of s and [η] for a homologous series of five xanthan samples having Mw ranging from 0.40 to 15 X 106, prepared by sonication of native xanthan, shows that, for low molecular weight, the intrinsic viscosity [η] obeys the relation [η]  KM1.35. The high value of the Staudinger exponent in this relation demonstrates that xanthan is a rod-like molecule having stiffness similar to that of native DNA, which has a Staudinger exponent of 1.32. Moreover, the absolute values of [η] suggest that xanthan has a mass per unit length of about 1900 daltons/nm, which is twice the mass per unit length of the single-stranded structure proposed from X-ray work.  相似文献   

17.
Synopsis Both physical and physiological modifications to the oxygen transport system promote high metabolic performance of tuna. The large surface area of the gills and thin blood-water barrier means that O2 utilization is high (30–50%) even when ram ventilation approaches 101 min–1kg–1. The heart is extremely large and generates peak blood pressures in the range of 70–100 mmHg at frequencies of 1–5 Hz. The blood O2 capacity approaches 16 ml dl–1 and a large Bohr coefficient (–0.83 to –1.17) ensures adequate loading and unloading of O2 from the well buffered blood (20.9 slykes). Tuna muscles have aerobic oxidation rates that are 3–5 times higher than in other teleosts and extremely high glycolytic capacity (150 mol g–1 lactate generated) due to enhanced concentration of glycolytic enzymes. Gill resistance in tuna is high and may be more than 50% of total peripheral resistance so that dorsal aortic pressure is similar to that in other active fishes such as salmon or trout. An O2 delivery/demand model predicts the maximum sustained swimming speed of small yellowfin and skipjack tuna is 5.6 BL s–1 and 3.5 BL sec–1, respectively. The surplus O2 delivery capacity at lower swimming speeds allows tuna to repay large oxygen debts while swimming at 2–2.5 BL s–1. Maximum oxygen consumption (7–9 × above the standard metabolic rate) at maximum exercise is provided by approximately 2 × increases in each of heart rate, stroke volume, and arterial-venous O2 content difference.Paper from International Union of Biological Societies symposium The biology of tunas and billfishes: an examination of life on the knife edge, organized by Richard W. Brill and Kim N. Holland.  相似文献   

18.
  • 1.1. Rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri Rich.) heads were perfused with phosphate buffered saline containing 10 μM adrenaline. The gills were ventilated with aerated water (PIO2 = 20.7–20.9 kPa). PvO2 and PaO2 were measured and PIO2 controlled.
  • 2.2. An equilibrium between PIO2 and PaO2 when PvO2 = 0 kPa, was never observed. The reasons for this difference in O2 tensions were evaluated.
  • 3.3. Perfusion with nitrogen equilibrated saline (PvO2 = 0 kPa) resulted in PaO2 of 16.4 ± 0.4 kPa. After a change to aerated saline (PvO2 20.7–20.9 kPa) PaO2 increased to 17.6 ± 0.5 kPa. In this situation when PvO2 = PIO2 the PIO2 − Pao, difference showed that gill tissue consumed O2 from the saline.
  • 4.4. As expected, an inhibition of this O2 consumption with cyanide in the ventilation water increased PaO2 to 20.1 ± 0.3 kPa. However a return to the N2-equilibrated saline (PvO2 = 0 kPa), still in presence of cyanide, decreased PaO2 to 17.2 ± 0.5 kPa. This indicates that O2 consumption of gill tissue is not the only factor limiting O2- transfer.
  • 5.5. An increase of perfusion flow (Q) within a physiological flow rate from 0.5 to 3.0 ml min−1 (100 g fish)−1 did not significantly affect PaO2 Thus, the O2 transfer in the perfused gills appear to be rather limited by perfusion than by diffusion.
  • 6.6. Ventilation at the rate used (800–1000 ml min−1 (100 g fish)−1)did not limit O2-transfer. The PIO2–PaO2 difference was not caused by a “water shunt”.
  • 7.7. We suggest therefore, that the PIO2-PaO2 difference in saline perfused gills is a result of a shunt, i.e. perfusate flow by-passing the gas exchange area in the gill circulation. The shunt was calculated to 11–22 of the total perfusion flow (Q).
  相似文献   

19.
The gills of the air-breathing estuarine goby,Pseudapocryptes lanceolatus, are reduced owing to the development of a specialized organ of O2 uptake from air. In the first gill arch, the filaments of the outer hemibranch are reduced to nearly one-half in comparison to those of its inner hemibranch. A smaller number of secondary lamellae per mm (27.6) occurring on one side of the gill filament reduces the gill surface area. A bilogarithmic plot of the gill area and the body weight indicates a curve with two significantly different components, one (b = 0.924) related to the fish weighing up to 6 g and the other (b = 0.405) to the fish weighing 8 g and above.  相似文献   

20.
Oxygen consumption rates were measured in a school of 56 horse mackerel Trachurus trachurus while at rest and while swimming at steady sustained speeds. Resting values of 38.76 and 42.10mg O2 kg?1 h?1 were measured in a sealed cylindrical tank (535 l) while observing that the fish school remained neutrally buoyant and inactive with only gentle pectoral fin movements and no swimming motion. The same school was trained to swim with projected light patterns within a 10-m diameter annular doughnut respirometer. The oxygen consumption increased from the resting level through 51 mg O2 kg?1 h?1 at the slowest swimming speeds of 0.29 m s?1 (0.95 L s?1) to around 259 mg O2 kg?1 h?1 at the higher measured swimming speed of 0.87 m s?1 (2.82 L s?1). The data fitted a curve where oxygen consumption rose in proportion to velocity to the power of 2.56 with the intercept at the resting level. The maximum sustained speed (80 min) of 1.12 m s?1 (3.63 Ls?1) was not achieved within the respirometer but corresponded to an estimated oxygen consumption of 458.33 mg O2 kg?1 h?1 giving a scope for aerobic activity of 419.02 mg O2 kg?1 h?1. At a speed of 0.87 m s?1, there was a lower bound on the aerobic efficiency of at least 38% and at 1.12 m s?1, the highest aerobic speed, of 40%. Sustained speeds swum in a curved path as here should be increased by 5% for a straight path giving a maximum sustained 80 min speed of 1.18 m s?1.  相似文献   

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