The Effects of Chronic Hypercarbia on Morphological and Ventilatory Development in Crayfish

Cassandra Poeppelman, Josh Hivner, Lynn K. Hartzler

Research output: Contribution to conferencePresentation

Abstract

Instances of abnormally high CO2 levels are becoming increasingly common in freshwater ecosystems undergoing eutrophication. Chronic hypercarbia (long-term elevation of the partial pressure of carbon dioxide (Pco2)) is pervasive in these eutrophic ecosystems. Elevated Pco2 increases the ventilation and metabolism of some tadpoles and aquatic frogs and hinders their morphological development23. We expect that chronic hypercarbia will affect most aquatic organisms in the same way, but it remains to be verified that chronic hypercarbic conditions also alter aquatic organisms similarly to intermittent and acute hypercarbic challenges.

Original languageAmerican English
StatePublished - Mar 18 2023
Event2023 CoSM Festival of Research -
Duration: Mar 18 2023 → …

Conference

Conference2023 CoSM Festival of Research
Period3/18/23 → …

Keywords

  • CO2
  • crayfish
  • hypercarbia

Disciplines

  • Biology
  • Life Sciences

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