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Heart rate responses to different temperatures in juvenile Poppiana dentata ( Randall, 1840 RANDALL, J.W., 1840. Catalogue of the Crustacea brought by Thomas Nuttall and JK Townsend, from the West Coast of North America and the Sandwich Islands, with descriptions of such species as are apparently new, among which are included species of different localities, previously existing in the collection of the Academy. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, vol. 8, pp. 106-147. )

Respostas de frequência cardíaca do Poppiana dentata jovem a diferentes temperaturas ( Randall, 1840 RANDALL, J.W., 1840. Catalogue of the Crustacea brought by Thomas Nuttall and JK Townsend, from the West Coast of North America and the Sandwich Islands, with descriptions of such species as are apparently new, among which are included species of different localities, previously existing in the collection of the Academy. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, vol. 8, pp. 106-147. )

Abstract

Temperature is one of the main factors that influences cardiovascular functioning in ectotherms. Hence this study sought to investigate heart rate responses of a freshwater crab species, Poppiana dentata, to different temperature exposures since the species generally reside in habitats of fluctuating physicochemistry. Heart rates were non-invasively determined in juvenile crabs for three temperature regimes, each over an 8-day session; A: temperature exposures of 26 °C (2 days) to 30 °C (3 days) to 26 °C (3 days), B: 26 °C (2 days) to 32 °C (3 days) to 26 °C (3 days) and C: a control at constant 26 °C. Heart rate variations were significant among the regimes (P < 0.05), with the median heart rate being highest for regime B (74 beats per minute or bpm) during the temperature insult (32 °C), relative to regime A (70 bpm) and the control (64 bpm). Notably, a suppression and inversion of the diurnal cardiac patterns occurred for regimes’ A and B crabs respectively, with rates from the highest temperature insult not shifting back to pre-insult levels during recovery (26 °C). It is plausible that P. dentata may have compensatory cardiovascular mechanisms that account for these differential heart rate responses, possibly conveying adaptive strategies in its dynamic habitat conditions.

Keywords:
heart rate; juvenile crabs; Poppiana dentata; temperature variation

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