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dc.contributor.author MENDEZ SANCHEZ, JOSE FERNANDO
dc.contributor.author Burggren, Warren
dc.creator MENDEZ SANCHEZ, JOSE FERNANDO; 80843
dc.creator Burggren, Warren;#0000-0001-8023-420X
dc.date.accessioned 2019-01-30T17:35:44Z
dc.date.available 2019-01-30T17:35:44Z
dc.date.issued 2017-06-24
dc.identifier.issn 2051-817X
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11799/98720
dc.description Articulo Cientifico es
dc.description.abstract Developmental plasticity of cardiorespiratory physiology in response to chronic hypoxia is poorly understood in larval fishes, especially larval airbreathing fishes, which eventually in their development can at least partially “escape” hypoxia through air breathing. Whether the development air breathing makes these larval fishes less or more developmentally plastic than strictly water breathing larval fishes remains unknown. Consequently, developmental plasticity of cardiorespiratory physiology was determined in two air-breathing anabantid fishes (Betta splendens and Trichopodus trichopterus). Larvae of both species experienced an hypoxic exposure that mimicked their natural environmental conditions, namely chronic nocturnal hypoxia (12 h at 17 kPa or 14 kPa), with a daily return to diurnal normoxia. Chronic hypoxic exposures were made from hatching through 35 days postfertilization, and opercular and heart rates measured as development progressed. Opercular and heart rates in normoxia were not affected by chronic nocturnal hypoxic. However, routine oxygen consumption _ MO2 (~4 lmol O2/g per hour in normoxia in larval Betta) was significantly elevated by chronic nocturnal hypoxia at 17 kPa but not by more severe (14 kPa) nocturnal hypoxia. Routine _ MO2 in Trichopodus (6–7 lmol O2/g per hour), significantly higher than in Betta, was unaffected by either level of chronic hypoxia. PCrit, the PO2 at which _ MO2 decreases as ambient PO2 falls, was measured at 35 dpf, and decreased with increasing chronic hypoxia in Betta, indicating a large, relatively plastic hypoxic tolerance. However, in contrast, PCrit in Trichopodus increased as rearing conditions grew more hypoxic, suggesting that hypoxic acclimation led to lowered hypoxic resistance. Species-specific differences in larval physiological developmental plasticity thus emerge between the relatively closely related Betta and Trichopodus. Hypoxic rearing increased hypoxic tolerance in Betta, which inhabits temporary ponds with nocturnal hypoxia. Trichopodus, inhabiting more permanent oxygenated bodies of water, showed few responses to hypoxia, reflecting a lower degree of developmental phenotypic plasticity. es
dc.description.sponsorship Support for this study was provided by NSF operating grant IOS-1025823 and IOS- 1543301 to Warren Burggren. The Collaboration Network in Comparative Ecophysiology of Vertebrates UAEM-PRODEP 11067 also provided support. es
dc.language.iso eng es
dc.publisher Physiological Reports es
dc.relation.ispartofseries Vol.;5
dc.relation.ispartofseries No.;15
dc.rights openAccess es
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
dc.subject Circulation es
dc.subject hypoxia es
dc.subject larval fishes, es
dc.subject phenotypic plasticity es
dc.subject respiration es
dc.subject.classification MEDICINA Y CIENCIAS DE LA SALUD
dc.title Cardiorespiratory physiological phenotypic plasticity in developing air-breathing anabantid fishes (Betta splendens and Trichopodus trichopterus) es
dc.type Artículo es
dc.provenance Científica es
dc.road Dorada es
dc.organismo Ciencias es
dc.ambito Internacional es
dc.cve.CenCos 21901 es
dc.cve.progEstudios 14 es
dc.audience students es
dc.audience researchers es
dc.type.conacyt article
dc.identificator 3


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  • Título
  • Cardiorespiratory physiological phenotypic plasticity in developing air-breathing anabantid fishes (Betta splendens and Trichopodus trichopterus)
  • Autor
  • MENDEZ SANCHEZ, JOSE FERNANDO
  • Burggren, Warren
  • Fecha de publicación
  • 2017-06-24
  • Editor
  • Physiological Reports
  • Tipo de documento
  • Artículo
  • Palabras clave
  • Circulation
  • hypoxia
  • larval fishes,
  • phenotypic plasticity
  • respiration
  • Los documentos depositados en el Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México se encuentran a disposición en Acceso Abierto bajo la licencia Creative Commons: Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivar 4.0 Internacional (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

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