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Title: Respiration and gas exchange during recovery from exercise in the American alligator. Author: Farmer CG, Carrier DR. Journal: Respir Physiol; 2000 Mar; 120(1):81-7. PubMed ID: 10786647. Abstract: Low respiratory exchange ratios (R) occur in reptiles. In crocodilians they have been attributed to the loss of respiratory CO2 into the urine and to the immediate exercise-history of an animal. In this study, expired ventilation (V(E)), oxygen consumption (V(O2)), and carbon dioxide excretion (V(CO2)) were measured during recovery from treadmill-exercise in the American alligator. Both V(O2) and V(CO2) decreased exponentially during recovery, but the decrease of V(CO2) was greater than that of V(O2). By 55 min into recovery R fell to 0.3 +/- 0.02 (mean +/- S.E.M). These low values of R may be partially attributable to hyperventilation that occurred during exercise. These data suggest that both hyperventilation during exercise and a metabolic acidosis deplete blood bicarbonate stores, contributing to a low R during recovery. We propose that the right to left cardiac shunt could facilitate restoration of these alkaline reserves and blood pH.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]