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Fig. 7. Thermal acclimation alters the temperature dependence of heart rate and
ventilation. Heart and ventilation rates (mean ± s.d.) were measured
simultaneously in single lobsters acclimated to cold (4°C; N=7)
and warm (20°C; N=7) temperatures. (A) Heart rates are
temperature dependent. For warm-acclimated lobsters the temperature-dependent
increase in heart rate (slope=0.0635) is statistically significant
(P=0.0001), whereas for cold-acclimated lobsters it is not
(slope=0.04; P=0.06). The temperature-dependent decrease in heart
rate at temperatures of 20°C and above is significant for both
warm-acclimated and cold-acclimated lobsters (slope=0.056,
P<0.0001 and slope=0.036, P<0.0001,
respectively). (B) Ventilation rate increases as a function of temperature up
to 20°C. For both warm- and cold-acclimated lobsters the increase in
ventilation at temperatures
20°C is statistically significant
(slope=0.1136; P<0.0001 for warm-acclimated lobsters;
slope=0.0235, P=0.0001 for cold-acclimated lobsters). At temperatures
>20°C ventilation decreases significantly in warm-acclimated lobsters
(slope=0.052, P=0.0001). In cold-acclimated lobsters, the
temperature dependence of ventilation decreases at temperatures >20°C,
although not to a significant extent (slope=0.09, P=0.413).
*Data from cold- and warm-acclimated lobsters are significantly different at
P<0.05. Insets show samples of traces from ventilation and heart
recordings in warm- and cold-acclimated lobsters at 2 and 20°C. Values of
N are
5, except as follows: heart rate in cold-acclimated animals
at 30°C (N=1), heart rate in warm-acclimated animals at 26°C
(N=4) and 30°C (N=2), ventilation in cold-acclimated
animals at 6°C (N=3), at 22°C (N=4), at 24°C
(N=4), at 26°C (N=1) and at 28°C (N=1), and
ventilation in warm-acclimated animals at 2°C (N=4), at 28°C
(N=4) and at 30°C (N=2).