Abstract

The cardiorespiratory responses were examined in yellowtail, Seriola quinqueradiata exposed to two levels of hypercapnia (seawater equilibrated with a gas mixture containing 1% CO(2) (water PCO(2) = 7 mmHg) or 5% CO(2) (38 mmHg)) for 72 hr at 20 degrees C. Mortality was 100% within 8 hr at 5% CO(2), while no fish died at 1% CO(2). No cardiovascular variables (cardiac output, Q; heart rate, HR; stroke volume, SV and arterial blood pressure, BP) significantly changed from pre-exposure values during exposure to 1% CO(2). Arterial CO(2) partial pressure (PaCO(2)) significantly increased (P < 0.05), reaching a new steady-state level after 3 hr. Arterial blood pH (pHa) decreased initially (P < 0.05), but was subsequently restored by elevation of plasma bicarbonate ([HCO(3)(-)]). Arterial O(2) partial pressure (PaO(2)), oxygen content (CaO(2)), and hematocrit (Hct) were maintained throughout the exposure period. In contrast, exposure to 5% CO(2) dramatically reduced Q (P < 0.05) through decreasing SV (P < 0.05), although HR did not change. BP was transiently elevated (P < 0.05), followed by a precipitous fall before death. The pHa was restored incompletely despite a significant increase in [HCO(3)(-)]. PaO(2) decreased only shortly before death, whereas CaO(2) kept elevated due to a large increase in Hct (P < 0.05). We tentatively conclude that cardiac failure is a primary physiological disorder that would lead to death of fish subjected to high environmental CO(2) pressures.

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