Acclimation of cardiovascular function in Notothenia coriiceps


Dataset Identification:

Resource Abstract:
Abstract: The Southern Ocean has experienced stable, cold temperatures for over 10 million years, yet particular regions are currently undergoing rapid warming. To investigate the impacts of warming on cardiovascular oxygen transport, we compared the cardio-respiratory performance in an Antarctic notothenioid (Notothenia coriiceps) that was maintained at 0 or 5°C for 6.0-9.5 weeks. When compared at the fish's respective acclimation temperature, the oxygen consumption rate and cardiac output were significantly higher in 5°C-acclimated than 0°C-acclimated fish. The 2.7-fold elevation in cardiac output in 5°C-acclimated fish (17.4 vs. 6.5 ml min-1 kg-1) was predominantly due to a doubling of stroke volume, likely in response to increased cardiac preload, as measured by higher central venous pressure (0.15 vs. 0.08 kPa); tachycardia was minor (29.5 vs. 25.2 beats min-1). When fish were acutely warmed, oxygen consumption rate increased by similar amounts in 0°C- and 5°C-acclimated fish at equivalent test temperatures. In both acclimation groups, the increases in oxygen consumption rate during acute heating were supported by increased cardiac output achieved by elevating heart rate, while stroke volume changed relatively little. Cardiac output was similar between both acclimation groups until 12°C when cardiac output became significantly higher in 5°C-acclimated fish, driven largely by their higher stroke volume. Although cardiac arrhythmias developed at a similar temperature (~14.5°C) in both acclimation groups, the hearts of 5°C-acclimated fish continued to pump until significantly higher temperatures (CTmax for cardiac function 17.7 vs. 15.0°C for 0°C-acclimated fish). These results demonstrate that N. coriiceps is capable of increasing routine cardiac output during both acute and chronic warming, although the mechanisms are different (heart rate-dependent versus primarily stroke volume-dependent regulation, respectively). Cardiac performance was enhanced at higher temperatures following 5°C acclimation, suggesting cardiovascular function may not constrain the capacity of N. coriiceps to withstand a warming climate.
Citation
Title  Acclimation of cardiovascular function in Notothenia coriiceps
publication date 2020-12-18
released date 2020-12-18
cited responsible party - author
individual Name  Axelsson, Michael
No contact information provided.
cited responsible party - author
individual Name  Crockett, Elizabeth
Contact information
Postal Address:
electronic Mail Address: crockett@ohio.edu
cited responsible party - author
individual Name  Egginton, Stuart
No contact information provided.
cited responsible party - author
individual Name  Farrell, Anthony
No contact information provided.
cited responsible party - author
individual Name  Joyce, William
No contact information provided.
cited responsible party - author
individual Name  O'Brien, Kristin
organisation Name  University of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK, 99775, US
Contact information
Postal Address:
electronic Mail Address: kmobrien@alaska.edu
Linkage for online resource
URL: http://orcid.org/ORCID:0000-0002-3311-0690
protocol  ORCID
cited responsible party - publisher
organisation Name  U.S. Antarctic Program (USAP) Data Center
No contact information provided.
Keywords:
Resource language:   eng
Resource progress code:   Complete
Constraints on resource usage:
Constraints
Use limitation statement:
Creative Commons Attribution Only v4.0 Generic [CC BY 4.0]
Constraints on resource usage:
Legal Constraints
Access Constraints   license
Other constraints
Creative Commons Attribution Only v4.0 Generic [CC BY 4.0]
Constraints on resource usage:
Security Constraints
Classification  unclassified
Format
Format name
Format version  1
Resource extent
Extent description
Antarctic Peninsula
Resource extent
Temporal Extent
2014-09-01 2019-08-31
Credits:
funderName:NSF:GEO:PLR:Antarctic Organisms and Ecosystems awardNumber:1341663 awardTitle:Collaborative Research: The Physiological and Biochemical Underpinnings of Thermal Tolerance in Antarctic Notothenioid Fishes
point of contact - pointOfContact
individual Name  Axelsson, Michael
No contact information provided.
Back to top:

Resource distribution information

Digital Transfer Options
Linkage for online resource
name  landing page
URL: https://www.usap-dc.org/view/dataset/601408
protocol  WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link
link function  information
Description  Link to a web page related to the resource.
Back to top

Metadata Information

Metadata data stamp:  2021-01-05T20:05:29Z
Resource Maintenance Information
maintenance or update frequency:
notes:  This metadata record was generated by an xslt transformation from a DataCite metadata record; The transform was created by Damian Ulbricht and Stephen M. Richard. 2017-11-15 these records include new IEDA keywords for geoportal facets Run on 2021-01-05T20:05:29Z
Metadata contact - pointOfContact
organisation Name  Interdisciplinary Earth Data Alliance
Contact information
Postal Address:
electronic Mail Address: web@usap-dc.org
Linkage for online resource
URL: https://www.usap-dc.org/static/imgs/header/usaplogo.png
link function  browseGraphic
Metadata scope code  dataset
Metadata hierarchy level name:  Dataset
Metadata language   eng
Metadata character set encoding:   utf8
Metadata standard for this record:  ISO 19139 Geographic Information - Metadata - Implementation Specification
standard version:  2007
Metadata record identifier:  urn:ieda:metadata:Acclimation-of-cardiovascular-function-in-Notothenia-coriiceps
Back to top

Metadata record format is ISO19139 XML (MD_Metadata)