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Hemodynamic responses to warming in euryhaline rainbow trout: implications of the osmo-respiratory compromise. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Rainbow trout in seawater adapt to water loss by increasing cardiac output and gastrointestinal blood flow, which helps them absorb water and ions more effectively.
  • During a temperature increase from 11 to 17°C, seawater-acclimated trout showed a significantly higher cardiac output compared to freshwater-acclimated trout, enabling greater increases in gastrointestinal blood flow.
  • These adaptations help maintain osmotic balance despite minor changes in blood composition and demonstrate the importance of gastrointestinal blood perfusion in fish coping with environmental challenges like warming waters.

Article Abstract

In seawater, rainbow trout () drink and absorb water through the gastrointestinal tract to compensate for water passively lost to the hyperosmotic environment. Concomitantly, they exhibit elevated cardiac output and a doubling of gastrointestinal blood flow to provide additional O to the gut and increase convective flux of absorbed ions and water. Yet, it is unknown how warming waters, which elevate tissue O demand and the rate of diffusion of ions and water across the gills (i.e. the osmo-respiratory compromise), affects these processes. We measured cardiovascular and blood variables of rainbow trout acclimated to freshwater and seawater during acute warming from 11 to 17°C. Relative to freshwater-acclimated trout, cardiac output was 34% and 55% higher in seawater-acclimated trout at 11 and 17°C, respectively, which allowed them to increase gastrointestinal blood flow significantly more during warming (increases of 75% in seawater vs. 31% in freshwater). These adjustments likely served to mitigate the impact of warming on osmotic balance, as changes in ionic and osmotic blood composition were minor. Furthermore, seawater-acclimated trout seemingly had a lower tissue O extraction, explaining why trout acclimated to freshwater and seawater often exhibit similar metabolic rates, despite a higher cardiac output in seawater. Our results highlight a novel role of gastrointestinal blood perfusion in the osmo-respiratory compromise in fish, and improve our understanding of the physiological changes euryhaline fishes must undergo when faced with interacting environmental challenges such as transient warming events.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.207522DOI Listing

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