Temperature-related heart rate in water and air and a comparison to other temperature-related measures of performance in the fiddler crab Leptuca pugilator (Bosc 1802)

Publication date: Available online 30 December 2019Source: Journal of Thermal BiologyAuthor(s): Jeffrey S. Levinton, Nils Volkenborn, Samuel Gurr, Kelly Correal, Sebastian Villacres, Rui Seabra, Fernando P. LimaAbstractPerformance in poikilotherms is known to be sensitive to temperature, often with a low-sloping increase with temperature to a peak, and a steep decline with increasing temperature past the peak. We complemented past measures of performance by measuring heartbeat rates of the fiddler crab Leptuca pugilator in water and in air as a function of a range of temperatures previously shown to affect other measures of performance. In water over a range of 20–50 °C, heartbeat increased steadily to a peak at 40 °C and then steeply declined to near zero at 50 °C. In air, heartbeat also increased, but to a peak at 35 °C and then with a gentler decline than was found in water. Part of this different response may be due to evaporative water loss, which reduced body temperature in air, and therefore thermal stress, relative to body temperature when crabs were immersed in water. Increased availability of oxygen from air, according to the oxygen and capacity-limited thermal tolerance hypothesis, likely increased aerobic scope past the thermal peak, relative to within water, where oxygen delivery at higher temperatures may have been curtailed.We compared the in-water heart rate performance relation to two previous measures of performance – endurance on a treadmill...
Source: Journal of Thermal Biology - Category: Biology Source Type: research
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