Abstract

Heart rate and arterial haemolymph flow rates were measured in freshly trapped Dungeness crabs, Cancer magister, using a pulsed-Doppler flowmeter. In the laboratory, freshly collected subtidal crabs exhibited endogenous rhythms in both cardiac function and haemolymph flow through one or more arterial systems, of both tidal and diurnal periodicity. The strongest tidal rhythms were recorded in the sternal and paired anterolateral arteries. These endogenous rhythms of selective tissue perfusion are related to an underlying locomotor activity, but may also be involved with hormonal transport or feeding. Changes in both heart rate and stroke volume were responsible for the increases in haemolymph flow rates. These rhythms were not entrained by aerial exposure, since confinement of arhythmic crabs in intertidal cages did not re-entrain an endogenous tidal rhythm. Endogenous locomotory rhythms are known to be controlled by neurohormones released in cycles from the sinus gland on the eyestalk. These hormones may also control the endogenous cardiovascular rhythms, since these were abolished after eyestalk ablation in freshly collected Cancer magister. These results suggest that hormones synthesized and released by the X-organ/sinus gland complex may, together with pericardial hormones, play a role in modulation of crustacean cardiovascular function.

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