ABSTRACT
The ventilatory responses of chelonian reptiles to hypoxic and hypercapnic stress have been fairly well described. As turtles are capable of large cardiac shunts, changes in pulmonary perfusion may be an equally viable and potent response to these stressors. To test this hypothesis, conscious unrestrained turtles were unidirectionally ventilated while blood flow in the left pulmonary artery (Q̇LPA) and left aortic arch (Q̇LAo) was monitored. Turtles were exposed to step changes (2.5 h step−1) in O2 tension (30, 15, 5, 2.5 or 0 % O2; CO2 inflow maintained constant) on day 1 followed by step changes in CO2 tension (0, 2, 4, 8 % CO2; O2 inflow maintained constant) on day 2. Steady-state cardiorespiratory variables were recorded for the last 30 min of each step change in gas tension.
Progressive hypoxia resulted in progressive increases in ventilation, Q̇LPA and Q̇LAo and a small, but non-significant, increase in heart rate. Progressive hypercapnia resulted in a progressive increase in ventilation, while Q̇LPA and Q̇Lao did not change at any level of CO2. These results suggest that information from the O2-sensitive chemoreceptors appears to be stimulatory to both the cardiovascular and ventilatory control systems, while CO2 chemoreception appears to affect primarily the ventilatory control system. These results also suggest that, in animals capable of intracardiac shunting, increasing pulmonary perfusion may be an integral component of the reflex response to hypoxia.