Beat goes on: carp heart keeps pace when fish lacks oxygen.Without oxygen, a mere human dies in minutes, but a Scandinavian fish not only can survive but also maintains a normal heart-heat for days, say researchers. The crucian carp crucian carp see carassius carassius. (Carassius carassius Carassius carassius farmed finfish in family Cyprinidae; called also crucian carp. See Table 23. ) has long been recognized as a champion survivor, thriving even in shallow ponds that freeze over during long Northern winters. These waters can turn into dead zones as creatures exhaust the oxygen in the water. What researchers haven't known, though, is what strategy the carp follows for such a feat, says Jonathan A. W. Stecyk of Simon Fraser University Simon Fraser University, main campus at Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada; provincially supported; coeducational; chartered 1963, opened 1965. The Harbour Centre campus in downtown Vancouver opened in 1989. in Burnaby, British Columbia “Burnaby” redirects here. For persons sharing this surname, see Burnaby (surname). Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, is the city immediately east of Vancouver. . Turtles, the other vertebrates famed for roughing out times with no oxygen, reduce their heart functions to only about 10 percent of normal. The new study of the crucian carp, however, shows that its heart rate dips when oxygen drops but rises again to essentially normal rates, Stecyk and his colleagues report in the Oct. 1 Science. "This is the first time we've seen in vertebrates that the heart will perform like this," he says. "I hope it will spur medical research" into protecting human hearts during transplant or malfunction. Lakes that freeze over in the winter and pile up with snow pose dangers beyond the chill, according to physiological ecologist Gordon Ultsch of the University of Alabama The University of Alabama (also known as Alabama, UA or colloquially as 'Bama) is a public coeducational university located in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA. Founded in 1831, UA is the flagship campus of the University of Alabama System. in Tuscaloosa. The snow keeps light from reaching photosynthetic inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. , so even they can't provide any oxygen. Without oxygen, animals' metabolic pathways elm up with excessive lactic acid lactic acid, CH3CHOHCO2H, a colorless liquid organic acid. It is miscible with water or ethanol. Lactic acid is a fermentation product of lactose (milk sugar); it is present in sour milk, koumiss, leban, yogurt, and cottage cheese. . "Turtles can accumulate huge amounts of lactic acid that would stone kill you or me," says Ultsch. Calcium carbonate calcium carbonate, CaCO3, white chemical compound that is the most common nonsiliceous mineral. It occurs in two crystal forms: calcite, which is hexagonal, and aragonite, which is rhombohedral. from a turtle's shell neutralizes the excess lactic acid. To see how crucian carp survive the no-oxygen challenge, Stecyk went to Norway' and tested carp in laboratory setups with water at 8[degrees]C that contained virtually no oxygen. The fish can derive energy from sugars via a biochemical pathway that doesn't require oxygen but is far less efficient than the oxygen route. By monitoring blood flow in 16 carp, Stecyk and his colleagues found that the normal heart rate of about 17 beats per minute beats per minute Cardiac pacing The unit of measure for the frequency of heart depolarizations or contractions each minute–or pulse rate dropped for the first 5 hours in the oxygen-free water but then gradually rose to 15. The fish maintained that rate for the rest of the 5-day experiment. Stecyk and his colleagues also tested the brain's control of the heart. Injections of a variety of substances that typically disrupt nervous system regulation of the heart had the same effect on fish whether or not they were oxygen deprived. "The heart is still working, and so is the brain," Stecyk says. In similar tests of turtles, the brain seems to lose its control of the heart during periods of oxygen deprivation. Physiologist Don Jackson of Brown University in Providence, R.I., calls the carp findings "significant." He notes that only certain carp, including goldfish, convert lactic acid to ethanol, which can he released from their gills. He considers that chemistry the "main adaptation" of the fish that makes no-oxygen survival possible. |
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