Experiments were performed to test the hypothesis that the marked ventilatory and cardiovascular responses to hypercarbia in rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss arise from specific stimulation of chemoreceptors localised to the first gill arch. This was accomplished by measuring cardiorespiratory variables during acute hypercarbia (20 min at P(CO(2))=8 mmHg; 1 mmHg=0.133 kPa) in fish subjected to selective bilateral extirpation of the first gill arch. The cardiovascular responses to hypercarbia in the intact fish included a significant bradycardia (from 75.0+/-1.6 to 69.0+/-2.0 beats min(-1); means +/- S.E.M.; N=16), an increase in dorsal aortic blood pressure (from 30.8+/-1.5 to 41.9+/-2.5 mmHg; N=16) and a rise in systemic vascular resistance (from 1.1+/-0.1 to 1.4+/-0.1 mmHg ml(-1) kg(-1) min(-1); N=16). Removal of the first gill arch or pre-treatment with the muscarinic receptor antagonist atropine prevented the hypercarbic bradycardia without affecting the pressure or resistance responses. Correlation analysis, however, revealed shallow but significant inverse relationships between water P(CO(2)) and cardiac frequency in both atropinised (r(2)=0.75) and gill-extirpated (r(2)=0.90) fish, suggesting a direct mild effect of CO(2) on cardiac function. The ventilatory response to hypercarbia in the intact fish consisted of an increase in ventilation amplitude (from 0.62+/-0.06 to 1.0+/-0.13 cm; N=16) with no change in breathing frequency. Removal of the first gill arch lowered resting breathing frequency and prevented the statistically significant elevation of breathing amplitude. Gill extirpation, however, did not totally abolish the positive correlation between water P(CO(2)) and ventilation amplitude (r(2)=0.84), suggesting the presence of additional (although less important) chemoreceptive sites that are not confined to the first gill arch. Plasma catecholamine levels were elevated during hypercarbia, and this response was unaffected by prior gill extirpation. To assess whether the CO(2) chemoreceptors of the first gill arch were sensing water and/or blood P(CO(2)), bolus injections of CO(2)-enriched water or saline were made into the buccal cavity or caudal vein, respectively. Injections of CO(2)-enriched water to preferentially stimulate external receptors evoked catecholamine release and cardiorespiratory responses that closely resembled the responses to hypercarbia. As in hypercarbia, extirpation of the first gill arch prevented the bradycardia and the increase in ventilation amplitude associated with externally injected CO(2)-enriched water. Except for a slight decrease in cardiac frequency (from 73.0+/-2.8 to 70.3+/-3.5 beats min(-1); N=11), injection of CO(2)-enriched saline to preferentially stimulate internal chemoreceptors did not affect any measured variable. Taken together, these data indicate that, in rainbow trout, the bradycardia and hyperventilation associated with hypercarbia are triggered largely by external CO(2) chemoreceptors confined to the first gill arch.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.205.21.3357 | DOI Listing |
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December 2024
Department of Oceanography, National Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan.
A new species of beardfish, genus , is described based on three specimens collected in Taiwanese waters and off the Chesterfield Islands of New Caledonia. It can be distinguished from its congeners by the following characters: dorsal-fin rays IV-V, 35-37; gill rakers on outer face of first gill arch 3+1+6=10; scales row between dorsal-fin origin and lateral line vertically 6-8 (S1) and posteriorly 12-14 (S2); pyloric caeca 40; snout rounded, with its surface rough and gelatinous, its tip evidently protrude anterior margin of premaxilla; ctenii on body scales arranged in a wedge-shape, forming three rows; 4 anal-fin spine long, 1.0%-1.
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December 2024
Department of Medicine, School of Clinical Medicine, LKS Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
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December 2024
Department of Dermatology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, 5939 Harry Hines Blvd POBII, Dallas, TX, HQ3.315, 75235, USA.
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El Colegio de la Frontera Sur; Unidad Chetumal Av. Centenario Km 5.5; CP 77014 Chetumal; Quintana Roo; Mexico.
Despite the threat that lionfishes pose to non-native marine ecosystems worldwide, their early life stages (ELS) remain difficult to distinguish from morphologically similar taxa due to inadequate descriptions and poorly defined taxonomic characters. Two members of the Indo-Pacific marine assemblage commonly known as lionfishes, zebrafishes, firefishes, turkeyfishes, and butterfly-cods (Scorpaeniformes: Scorpaenidae: Pteroinae) are invasive in the Western North Atlantic (WNA). Here, we describe the ELS of Pterois volitans, Dendrochirus barberi, and two transforming larvae and an early juvenile of D.
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