On hot, humid days, you might jump into water to cool down, but for the tiny mangrove rivulus fish, cooling down means jumping
out of water, according to a new study from the University of Guelph.
In the study published today in the journal
Biology Letters,
the researchers describe how these fish air-chill themselves on solid
ground in order to drop their body temperatures. The researchers also
found that fish exposed to higher temperatures for a week tolerated
warmer water better.
The fish jump out of the water to escape
rising temperatures, said integrative biology professor Pat Wright,
senior author of the study.
“If the fish are prevented from jumping out of the water, they would die,” she said.
“The
water evaporates off the fish and they cool down their body
temperatures slightly. It only takes about a couple seconds for the fish
to start to cool down.”
A mangrove rivulus fish
The
rivulus fish live in waters from Florida to Brazil, where water
temperatures can reach 38 C. (Normal human body temperature is 37 C.)
The
researchers, led by undergraduate students Dan Gibson and Emma
Sylvester, filmed the fish with a camera that measures body temperature.
As the water warmed, the fish flung themselves out and onto damp filter
paper, where they cooled down almost immediately. They found that after
one minute, the body temperatures of the fish actually dropped below
that of the filter paper.
“Based on physics, we would expect
evaporative cooling to happen, but this is the first time it was
directly measured,” said Wright.
0 comments:
Post a Comment