Warm Blooded Fish

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LovelyLadyLux
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Warm Blooded Fish

Post by LovelyLadyLux »

I saw this article on the newsfeed of MSN by the Washington Post and as it was News to me I posted it here. First the photo of the fish captured my attention (I love fish and actually wish I had an aquarium) then the caption title - "First fully warm-blooded fish found"

Just had to share it here cause, as the article says, it totally contradicts everything I ever learned in school that ALL fish were cold blooded.

This would definitely be one interesting fish and I do pity the slower moving prey fish down there in the depths.

As a tidbit - our provincial Museum has an entire floor dedicated to fish and creature of the DEEP SEA. When you enter the floor there is a set up that gives you the impression of going DOWN in a submersible to the deep deep sea. Lights go out and then the displays come on showing the sea creatures as they naturally floress(?) (Not sure that is a word but it is when something glows! ;) which is obviously not my brain right now)

Anyway - very interesting article re: new discovery

This is the URL (so you can SEE the fish - I couldn't figure out how to cut and paste the photo)

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technolog ... id=UP97DHP

EDIT: I have pasted you the image, :up
Horus

6424


It’s one of the most basic biology facts we’re taught in school growing up: Birds and mammals are warm-blooded, while reptiles, amphibians and fish are cold-blooded. But new research is turning this well-known knowledge on its head with the discovery of the world’s first warm-blooded fish — the opah.

In a paper published today in Science, researchers from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) describe the unique mechanism that enables the opah, a deepwater predatory fish, to keep its body warm. The secret lies in a specially designed set of blood vessels in the fish’s gills, which allows the fish to circle warm blood throughout its entire body.

Scientists already suspected the opah was special, says Heidi Dewar, a researcher at NOAA’s Southwest Fisheries Science Center and one of the paper’s authors. Most fish who live where the opah does — that is, hundreds of feet deep, in some of the ocean’s darkest and coldest places — are sluggish, thanks to the low temperatures. At these depths, even predatory fish tend to be slow-moving, waiting patiently for prey to come by rather than actively chasing it down. But the opah, which spends all its time in these deep places, has many features usually associated with a quick-moving, active predator, such as a large heart, lots of muscle and big eyes. These characteristics made the opah “a curiosity,” Dewar says.

The opah’s secret first started to come out when NOAA researcher and lead author Nicholas Wegner looked at a gill sample and noticed something intriguing.

All fish have two kinds of blood vessels in their gills: vessels carrying blood in from the body to pick up oxygen, and other vessels carrying oxygenated blood back out again. In the opah, the incoming blood is warm after circulating through the fish’s body. This is because the opah swims by quickly flapping its pectoral fins, rather than undulating its body like many other fish do, to propel itself through the water — a process that generates high heat. But outgoing blood, which has just been in contact with water in the gills, is cold. Wegner noticed that in the opah’s gills, the two sets of vessels are tightly bundled against each other, so that the incoming blood vessels can warm up the outgoing blood before it goes anywhere else. This set-up, known as “counter-current heat exchange,” allows warm blood to be delivered throughout the body.

Some other types of fish, such as tuna, have similarly designed blood vessels in certain parts of their bodies, allowing for “regional endothermy” — warm-bloodedness that’s limited to certain organs or muscles, such as the eyes, liver or swimming muscles. But the opah is the only fish scientists know of that has this design in its gills, where most fish lose the majority of their body heat to the surrounding cold water. By warming up the blood in the gills before it goes anywhere else, the opah achieves not just regional endothermy, but whole-body endothermy. Testing showed that the opah is able to maintain a body temperature about 5 degrees Celsius warmer than the surrounding water.

Being warm-blooded gives the opah a major competitive advantage. Even fish with regional endothermy usually can’t keep their heart warm. “If your heart’s cold, there’s only so much you can do,” Dewar says. “It doesn’t matter how much your muscles will perform, if your heart can’t deliver the oxygen and nutrients, your muscles can only do so much.” This means fish like tuna must constantly make trips back to the surface to warm up if they don’t want to slow down.

The opah, on the other hand, can spend all its time in the deep waters without losing its edge. And being warm-blooded in such cold temperatures means its eyesight and muscle performance is sharper than its sluggish, cold-blooded cousins. “The prey’s at a complete disadvantage,” Dewar says.

While only one species of opah is currently recognized — Lampris guttatus — scientists are starting to believe that they should actually divide the opah into several different species based on genetic variations in different populations around the world, according to Dewar. The opah in this study were found off the West Coast of North America, so the next step will be to start sampling opah in other parts of the world to see if they all have the same specialized gills, Dewar says.

Down the road, future studies could also examine other related types of fish to try and figure out how and when those special gills evolved. It’s possible that other deep-water species have similar adaptations.

For now, though, the opah enjoys the spotlight as the world’s first — and, so far, only — warm-blooded fish. “I think that it’s really exciting that we spend so much time studying especially these larger fish to find something that’s completely unique and has never been seen before in any fish,” Dewar says. “We’ve been very excited about it.”

Also in Energy & Environment:

The other scary thing about wildfires — they can make global warming worse

No, genetically modified pet fish are not going to wreak ecological havoc

Paper finds a surprising link between warmer temperatures and math test scores


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Re: Warm Blooded Fish

Post by Horus »

Very interesting article, I had always thought that ALL fish were cold blooded :urm: so a real surprise there.
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Re: Warm Blooded Fish

Post by LovelyLadyLux »

I think going back in my academic history that somewhere around Grade 6 or 7 a teacher now might owe me a corrected score on an exam! ;)

The article definitely caught my interest. Quite a unique looking fish too and seems a successful predator.

Now I want to know how they happened to catch this guy way down there. I've watched documentaries of deep sea exploration and couldn't force myself into one of those tiny submersibles on a bet. Claustrophobia would strike and no way could I go down no matter how interesting I thought the sights down there would be.

Must be interesting in the extreme to see all the different sea life floating past the lights and little windows (or TV cams) they use to capture the images. So much we don't know .....
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Re: Warm Blooded Fish

Post by Horus »

That is also the last place you would get me to go also, I hate confined spaces!!!!! curiously though I used to go Potholing :tk
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Re: Warm Blooded Fish

Post by LovelyLadyLux »

You've said that before in previous posts the you used to do that - UGH! Sends a shiver just thinking about sticking my head + body into a hole and not being able to turn around. No way could I do it and to think about a submersible is beyond my thinking - nope never not ever ;)
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