Abstract

When water temperature was increased from 12 to 27°C at a rate of 2°C h−1, oxygen consumption of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss was correlated strongly with both heart rate and blood oxygen extraction but the relationship with cardiac output was variable and weak. On the other hand, when water temperature was decreased from 21 to 12°C at a rate of 0·5°C h−1, oxygen consumption was correlated with both heart rate and cardiac output but not with blood oxygen extraction. When fish were forced to swim increasingly faster, heart rate, cardiac output and blood oxygen extraction all correlated positively with oxygen consumption. For both cardiac output and heart rate, the slope of the regression line with oxygen consumption was elevated significantly more when the fish were forced to swim at increasingly higher swimming speeds than when water temperature was increased or decreased. The variation of the regression lines between cardiac output and oxygen consumption indicated that cardiac output presents few advantages over heart rate as a predictor of metabolic rate.

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