Lecture 5 circulation Flashcards
agnatha and elasmobranchii circulation(4 steps)
1.heart
2.ventral aorta
3.gills
4.dorsal aorta
teleost circulation (4)
left and right branches of dorsal aorta
caudal heart aids venous return in many teleosts (except Acanthopterygii) & elasmobranchs
secondary circulation supplies capillary beds in epidermis of exposed portions of scales - may contain 50% plasma
few erythrocytes, function poorly known
whats in fish blood (6)
erythrocytes (red cells) except for leptocephalus, eel larvae, Antarctic channichthyids
leukocytes (white cells) for clotting and immune functions
nutrients
hormones
antifreeze glucoprotein or glucopeptide in some species
hemoglobin : protein (globin’s) can vary between species
bohr effect (3)
Higher O2 uptake rate of Hemoglobin at high pH
-H+ ions bind and change the shape of molecule
-O2 more readily lost to respiring tissues at low pH (affects rate)
root effect (2)
Root Effect : reduced pH may also limit maximum O2 binding
especially important for fish with swim bladders
the heart (3)
-coordinated muscular contractions and valves to prevent backflow
Elasmobranchs have contractile conus arteriosus with valves
Most teleosts have their conus arteriosus reduced with single valve
-bulbous arteriosus maintains constant pressure
through heart contractions (expands up to 700x
in carp)
branchiostegal pump (2)
negative pressure pump has 2 parts:
buccopharyngeal cavity (‘inside of mouth’)
parabranchial cavivity (between gills & operculum)
waterflow (3 steps)
mouth opens & buccal cavity enlarges - water in
parabranchial cavity enlarges - water over gills
mouth closes, cavities contract - water over gills and out operculum
gill flow structure (3)
arterioarterial flow provides O2 to body-afferent artery -> lacunae & central sinus -> efferent artery
pressure drops (30% - 60%) between ventral & dorsal aorta
arteriovenus flow (not illustrated) for nutrients to lamella
bone and pilaster cells structurally support lamella
gas bladder ecology
Benthic forms - often lacking
Marine, narrow depth range - ~5% volume
Freshwater (typically)- ~7-10.6% volume
Streams - smaller than still water species
gas bladder ecology
Benthic forms - often lacking
Marine, narrow depth range - ~5% volume
Freshwater (typically)- ~7-10.6% volume
Streams - smaller than still water species
gas bladders
physostomous (pneumatic duct)
sometimes air breathing e.g. mudskippers
physoclistous (“closed”)
gas exchange and buoyancy via circulatory system alone