The contribution of air breathing to aerobic scope and exercise performance in the banded knifefish Gymnotus carapo L

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The contribution of air breathing to aerobic scope and exercise performance in the banded knifefish Gymnotus carapo L. / McKenzie, David J.; Steffensen, John Fleng; Taylor, Edwin W.; Abe, Augusto S.

In: Journal of Experimental Biology, Vol. 215, 2012, p. 1323-1330.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

McKenzie, DJ, Steffensen, JF, Taylor, EW & Abe, AS 2012, 'The contribution of air breathing to aerobic scope and exercise performance in the banded knifefish Gymnotus carapo L', Journal of Experimental Biology, vol. 215, pp. 1323-1330. https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.064543

APA

McKenzie, D. J., Steffensen, J. F., Taylor, E. W., & Abe, A. S. (2012). The contribution of air breathing to aerobic scope and exercise performance in the banded knifefish Gymnotus carapo L. Journal of Experimental Biology, 215, 1323-1330. https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.064543

Vancouver

McKenzie DJ, Steffensen JF, Taylor EW, Abe AS. The contribution of air breathing to aerobic scope and exercise performance in the banded knifefish Gymnotus carapo L. Journal of Experimental Biology. 2012;215:1323-1330. https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.064543

Author

McKenzie, David J. ; Steffensen, John Fleng ; Taylor, Edwin W. ; Abe, Augusto S. / The contribution of air breathing to aerobic scope and exercise performance in the banded knifefish Gymnotus carapo L. In: Journal of Experimental Biology. 2012 ; Vol. 215. pp. 1323-1330.

Bibtex

@article{af6b46f04e654c38957d79ba83146a87,
title = "The contribution of air breathing to aerobic scope and exercise performance in the banded knifefish Gymnotus carapo L",
abstract = "The contribution of air breathing to aerobic metabolic scope and exercise performance was investigated in a teleost with bimodal respiration, the banded knifefish, submitted to a critical swimming speed (U(crit)) protocol at 30°C. Seven individuals (mean ± s.e.m. mass 89±7 g, total length 230±4 mm) achieved a U(crit) of 2.1±1 body lengths (BL) s(-1) and an active metabolic rate (AMR) of 350±21 mg kg(-1) h(-1), with 38±6% derived from air breathing. All of the knifefish exhibited a significant increase in air-breathing frequency (f(AB)) with swimming speed. If denied access to air in normoxia, these individuals achieved a U(crit) of 2.0±0.2 BL s(-1) and an AMR of 368±24 mg kg(-1) h(-1) by gill ventilation alone. In normoxia, therefore, the contribution of air breathing to scope and exercise was entirely facultative. In aquatic hypoxia (P(O(2))=4 kPa) with access to normoxic air, the knifefish achieved a U(crit) of 2.0±0.1 BL s(-1) and an AMR of 338±29 mg kg(-1) h(-1), similar to aquatic normoxia, but with 55±5% of AMR derived from air breathing. Indeed, f(AB) was higher than in normoxia at all swimming speeds, with a profound exponential increase during exercise. If the knifefish were denied access to air in hypoxia, U(crit) declined to 1.2±0.1 BL s(-1) and AMR declined to 199±29 mg kg(-1) h(-1). Therefore, air breathing allowed the knifefish to avoid limitations to aerobic scope and exercise performance in aquatic hypoxia.",
author = "McKenzie, {David J.} and Steffensen, {John Fleng} and Taylor, {Edwin W.} and Abe, {Augusto S.}",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1242/jeb.064543",
language = "English",
volume = "215",
pages = "1323--1330",
journal = "Journal of Experimental Biology",
issn = "0022-0949",
publisher = "The/Company of Biologists Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The contribution of air breathing to aerobic scope and exercise performance in the banded knifefish Gymnotus carapo L

AU - McKenzie, David J.

AU - Steffensen, John Fleng

AU - Taylor, Edwin W.

AU - Abe, Augusto S.

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - The contribution of air breathing to aerobic metabolic scope and exercise performance was investigated in a teleost with bimodal respiration, the banded knifefish, submitted to a critical swimming speed (U(crit)) protocol at 30°C. Seven individuals (mean ± s.e.m. mass 89±7 g, total length 230±4 mm) achieved a U(crit) of 2.1±1 body lengths (BL) s(-1) and an active metabolic rate (AMR) of 350±21 mg kg(-1) h(-1), with 38±6% derived from air breathing. All of the knifefish exhibited a significant increase in air-breathing frequency (f(AB)) with swimming speed. If denied access to air in normoxia, these individuals achieved a U(crit) of 2.0±0.2 BL s(-1) and an AMR of 368±24 mg kg(-1) h(-1) by gill ventilation alone. In normoxia, therefore, the contribution of air breathing to scope and exercise was entirely facultative. In aquatic hypoxia (P(O(2))=4 kPa) with access to normoxic air, the knifefish achieved a U(crit) of 2.0±0.1 BL s(-1) and an AMR of 338±29 mg kg(-1) h(-1), similar to aquatic normoxia, but with 55±5% of AMR derived from air breathing. Indeed, f(AB) was higher than in normoxia at all swimming speeds, with a profound exponential increase during exercise. If the knifefish were denied access to air in hypoxia, U(crit) declined to 1.2±0.1 BL s(-1) and AMR declined to 199±29 mg kg(-1) h(-1). Therefore, air breathing allowed the knifefish to avoid limitations to aerobic scope and exercise performance in aquatic hypoxia.

AB - The contribution of air breathing to aerobic metabolic scope and exercise performance was investigated in a teleost with bimodal respiration, the banded knifefish, submitted to a critical swimming speed (U(crit)) protocol at 30°C. Seven individuals (mean ± s.e.m. mass 89±7 g, total length 230±4 mm) achieved a U(crit) of 2.1±1 body lengths (BL) s(-1) and an active metabolic rate (AMR) of 350±21 mg kg(-1) h(-1), with 38±6% derived from air breathing. All of the knifefish exhibited a significant increase in air-breathing frequency (f(AB)) with swimming speed. If denied access to air in normoxia, these individuals achieved a U(crit) of 2.0±0.2 BL s(-1) and an AMR of 368±24 mg kg(-1) h(-1) by gill ventilation alone. In normoxia, therefore, the contribution of air breathing to scope and exercise was entirely facultative. In aquatic hypoxia (P(O(2))=4 kPa) with access to normoxic air, the knifefish achieved a U(crit) of 2.0±0.1 BL s(-1) and an AMR of 338±29 mg kg(-1) h(-1), similar to aquatic normoxia, but with 55±5% of AMR derived from air breathing. Indeed, f(AB) was higher than in normoxia at all swimming speeds, with a profound exponential increase during exercise. If the knifefish were denied access to air in hypoxia, U(crit) declined to 1.2±0.1 BL s(-1) and AMR declined to 199±29 mg kg(-1) h(-1). Therefore, air breathing allowed the knifefish to avoid limitations to aerobic scope and exercise performance in aquatic hypoxia.

U2 - 10.1242/jeb.064543

DO - 10.1242/jeb.064543

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 22442370

VL - 215

SP - 1323

EP - 1330

JO - Journal of Experimental Biology

JF - Journal of Experimental Biology

SN - 0022-0949

ER -

ID: 37894263