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Mathie, N. J., & Franklin, C. E. (2006). The influence of body size on the diving behaviour and physiology of the bimodally respiring turtle, elseya albagula. Journal of Comparative Physiology B. Biochemical, Systems, and Environmental Physiology. 
Added by: Admin (14 Aug 2008 20:31:53 UTC)
Resource type: Journal Article
BibTeX citation key: Mathie2006
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Categories: General
Keywords: Chelidae, Elseya, Elseya albagula, Physiologie = physiology, Schildkröten = turtles + tortoises
Creators: Franklin, Mathie
Collection: Journal of Comparative Physiology B. Biochemical, Systems, and Environmental Physiology
Views: 6/860
Views index: 14%
Popularity index: 3.5%
Abstract     
In aquatic vertebrates that acquire oxygen aerially dive duration scales positively with body mass, i.e. larger animals can dive for longer periods, however in bimodally respiring animals the relationship between dive duration and body mass is unclear. In this study we investigated the relationships between body size, aquatic respiration, and dive duration in the bimodally respiring turtle, Elseya albagula. Under normoxic conditions, dive duration was found to be independent of body mass. The dive durations of smaller turtles were equivalent to that of larger individuals despite their relatively smaller oxygen stores and higher mass specific metabolic rates. Smaller turtles were able to increase their dive duration through the use of aquatic respiration. Smaller turtles had a relatively higher cloacal bursae surface area than larger turtles, which allowed them to extract a relatively larger amount of oxygen from the water. By removing the ability to respire aquatically (hypoxic conditions), the dive duration of the smaller turtles significantly decreased restoring the normal positive relationship between body size and dive duration that is seen in other air-breathing vertebrates.
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