540 likes | 668 Views
Aquatic Physiology Respiration gill diffusion hemoglobin pH Regulation gas bladder osmosis ion balance excretion. Chapter 3 : Figures 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, Table 3.1 Chapter 4 : Figures 4.4, 4.5, 4.6 (Eq.) Chapter 5 : Figures 5.1, 5.2, 5.3 (5th ed.)
E N D
Aquatic Physiology • Respiration • gill • diffusion • hemoglobin • pH • Regulation • gas bladder • osmosis • ion balance • excretion Chapter 3: Figures 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, Table 3.1 Chapter 4: Figures 4.4, 4.5, 4.6 (Eq.) Chapter 5: Figures 5.1, 5.2, 5.3 (5th ed.) Chapter 6: Figures 6.1, 6.2, 6.4, 6.6 • see QS 6 and QS 7 • bring textbook to class
water flow blood flow Figure 3.1 (3.2 3rd Ed.)
heart blood to gills from body collects, pressurizes, propels, smooths Figure 4.10, all eds.
fishes oxygenated dorsal deoxygenated ventral amphibians reptiles birds mammals circulatory system
gas exchange tissues gills
gas exchange diffusion: the movement of gas from a higher concentration to a lower concentration passive process
gill arches gill rakers forward feeding SA bumblebee catfish Batrochoglanis villosusformerly Pimelodidae, now Pseudopimelodidae
gill filaments backward gas exchange
Aquatic Habitats Water Air 800 x density least (0 C) expands most (4 C) contracts solid, liquid, gas Absorbs more energy (light, radiation, heat) Holds more energy (light, radiation, heat) Conducts more energy (sound, electricity) Dissolves more molecules (nutrients, toxins) 30x less oxygenfreshwater 20-40x saltwater~50x less
gas exchange diffusion: the movement of gas from a higher concentration to a lower concentration passive process important factors: • concentration gradient • oxygen solubility • surface area • diffusion distance
Aquatic Physiology • Respiration • gill • diffusion • hemoglobin • pH • Regulation • gas bladder • osmosis • ion balance • excretion Chapter 3: Figures 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, Table 3.1 Chapter 4: Figures 4.4, 4.5, 4.6 (Eq.) Chapter 5: Figures 5.1, 5.2, 5.3 (5th ed.) Chapter 6: Figures 6.1, 6.2, 6.4, 6.6 • see QS 6 and QS 7 • bring textbook to class
diffusion defined: the movement of oxygen gas from a higher concentration to a lower concentration important factors: • concentration gradient • oxygen solubility • surface area • diffusion distance
water flow blood flow Figure 3.1 (3.2 3rd Ed.)
lamella (s) lamellae (pl)
lamella (pl) counter-current gas exchange
Parallel Exchange Δ30°C Anti-Parallel or Counter-Current Δ55°C heat convection = gas diffusion greatest exchange
Figure 4.9, 4th and 3rd eds. concentration gradients PO2 ~ mmHg (millimeters of mercury) kPA or kilo Pascal (1000 kg/ms2) atm or atmosphere (1 = 760 mmHg [sea level] = 100 kPa)
diffusion defined: the movement of oxygen gas from a higher concentration to a lower concentration important factors: • concentration gradient • oxygen solubility • surface area • diffusion distance
temperature oxygen solubility salinity other gases Figure 3.2, 4th, 5th Ed.
pressure volume # of molecules temperature gas ~ PV = nRT where total pressure, Pt = P1 + P2 + P3 .....Pn and 1, 2, 3, = gas 1, gas 2, gas 3,.... such as....O2, CO2, N2,... oxygen concentration = oxygen partial pressure
PO2 >156 mmHg O2 > 6 mg O2/L Figure 3.2, 4th, 5th Ed.
diffusion defined: the movement of oxygen gas from a higher concentration to a lower concentration important factors: • concentration gradient • oxygen solubility • surface area • diffusion distance
surface area number thickness lamella (pl)
diffusion defined: the movement of oxygen gas from a higher concentration to a lower concentration important factors: • concentration gradient • oxygen solubility • surface area • diffusion distance
distance from water to blood oxygen gas [high] [low] • across the permeable lamellar membrane
Aquatic Physiology • Respiration • gill • diffusion • hemoglobin • pH • Regulation • gas bladder • osmosis • ion balance • excretion Chapter 3: Figures 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, Table 3.1 Chapter 4: Figures 4.4, 4.5, 4.6 (Eq.) Chapter 5: Figures 5.1, 5.2, 5.3 (5th ed.) Chapter 6: Figures 6.1, 6.2, 6.4, 6.6 • see QS 6 and QS 7 • bring textbook to class
habitat • activity role of Hb and pH (via CO2) species A species B Figure 4.4, all eds.
respiratory pigments also Antarctic fishes (notothenoids)
hemoglobin, Hb • transport molecule • oxygen • carbon dioxide • carbon monoxide • hydrogen • occur in erythroctyes • red blood cells iron (heme) unit 4 protein chains aka tetrameric
measuring Hb behavior O2 capacity = 100% maximum saturation O2affinity = 50% half saturation value, or P50
1. Hb behavior ~ binds reversibly maximum binding minimum binding high PO2 (water/gills/lung) Hb-O2 low PO2 (blood/tissues) Hb O2
Hb-O2 1. high PO2 2. low PO2 gills tissues O2 Hb binds reversibly
2. Hb behavior ~ sensitive to pH pH 6 pH 4 Hb-O2 Hb O2
pH = measure of H+ ions more H+ ions, more acidity, lower pH
tissues bicarbonate equilibrium equation CO2 + H2O H2CO3 HCO3- + H+ carbon metabolism lowers pH
Hb-O2 1. high PO2 2. low PO2 gills tissues O2 Hb 3. low pH sensitive to pH
sensitive to pH (via CO2) tissue pH (CO2) species A species B favors Hb O2 Figure 4.4, all eds.
pH effects on Hb at tissues Root effect/shift O2 capacity = 100% maximum saturation O2affinity = 50% half saturation value, or P50 Bohr effect/shift
Figure 4.5, all eds. pH 8.0 7.5 7.2 Bohr = decreased affinityRoot = decreased capacity
tradeoffs species A species B Hb capacity: higher lower Hb affinity (P50): higher (lower <20 mmHg) lower (higher 20+ mmHg) high