Affects inner temperature- homoeostasis, of fish, affecting how the body work. Ex: Your body would move slower if you were in the temperature of below the freezing point.
Temperature affects environment-Oxygen. Hot weather will evaporate water releasing Oxygen- leaving less for the fish to breath.
In addition, the solubility of gases decreases as the temperature of water increases. This means that the hotter a body of water is, the less oxygen is able to dissolve in it. So, very high water temperatures could make it difficult for fish to breath.
reaction rate doubles with every 10 K temperature change
yes ofcourse!
pH and temperature
When we take exercise our body needs more oxygen .Our normal breathing rate do not fulfill the oxygen requirement due to which breathing rate is increased.
The general rule of thumb is that the reaction rate will double for each 10ºC change in temperature. So, going from 25 to 50 degrees, would increase the reaction rate APPROXIMATELY by 4.5 times. This is not a law, but just a general rule of thumb for approximating the rate.
The smaller the size of a tropical fish the faster their breathing rate will be. The smallest fish will have the fastest breathing rates.
A fishes breathing rate is totally dependent upon the temp of the water, the activity of the fish and its state of excitement/panic etc. In order to be given new conditions a fish will have been chased, netted, enclosed/trapped in a small container, and it may also suffer considerable temperature changes and water parameter changes as well as an environmental change/shock. I would expect a fishes breathing rate to increase tremendously after such treatment.
it dosent
A fishes breathing rate varies just as yours does. It depends on the temperature of the water and the amount of Oxygen that is available plus the amount of excercise or excitement/fright the fish is experiencing.
You probably mean "respiration" instead of "breathing". Chick peas don't breath. Increasing the temperature increases the respiration rate and decreasing temperatures decrease the respiration rate.
bear
Indeed it will.
As the water temperature decreases the fish's breathing rate decreases as well. If you increase the temperature the fish's breathing rate will increase back to it's normal breathing rate.
A change in temperature can change the rate of physical or chemical change.
The answer depends on the rate of WHAT! The rate of water boiling, for example, will increase with temperature but the rate of ice forming will decrease.
The breathing rate and pulse rate are related proportionally. If the breathing rate increases, so does the pulse rate. The pulse rate is an indication of the breathing rate.
True