INTRODUCTIONATP turnover in muscle during high-intensity exhaustive exercise and exposure to hypoxia is primarily supported by substrate-level phosphorylation [creatine phosphate (PCr) hydrolysis and glycolysis], which serves to compensate for the metabolic demands that exceed the capacity of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (Hochachka and Somero, 2002). During hypoxia exposure, hypoxia-tolerant animals, such as the common carp, typically suppress ATP turnover because of an inhibition of mitochondrial function; they rely on substrate-level phosphorylation to maintain energy balance (Bickler and Buck, 2007). By contrast, ATP turnover in white muscle during exhaustive exercise can increase by up to 40-fold (Moyes and West, 1995;Richards et al., 2002a), well beyond the capacity of oxidative phosphorylation to supply ATP and therefore PCr hydrolysis and glycolysis are coordinately increased to support a power output that exceeds oxidative capacity. Although the reasons for the activation of substrate-level phosphorylation during exhaustive exercise or exposure to hypoxia differ, the end metabolic profiles are similar, with low muscle [glycogen] and [PCr], and high [lactate] and metabolic [H + ] (Richards et al., 2007;Wang et al., 1994). In spite of these similar metabolic profiles, no study has directly compared recovery metabolism following exhaustive exercise and exposure to hypoxia.During recovery from exhaustive exercise and hypoxia, pathways must be activated to resynthesize PCr and glycogen. The recovery of these metabolites will be linked because of their dependence on mitochondrial ATP production and metabolic H + use. In particular, the rate of PCr and intracellular pH (pH i ) recovery following exercise or hypoxia exposure will be linked through the creatine kinase catalyzed reaction:where mitochondrial ATP serves as the phosphate donor for free creatine accumulated during the metabolic insult. Phosphocreatine hydrolysis will have an alkalinizing effect on the intracellular fluid, whereas PCr synthesis during recovery will have an acidifying effect. As a result, during recovery there is an almost complete recovery of PCr before pH i and lactate begin to return to normoxic resting levels (Richards et al., 2002b;Schulte et al., 1992;van den Thillart et al., 1989;Wang et al., 1994). Creatine kinase is a near-equilibrium reversible enzyme (Lawson and Veech, 1979) ]. In addition, changes in ATP, ADP free and H + play a dominant role in regulating mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and glycogensis, and therefore these metabolites functionally link and coordinate metabolism during recovery.Rates of metabolism and ATP production are strongly influenced by temperature in ectothermic animals, thus temperature acclimation may affect rates of metabolic recovery. Temperature acclimation has been shown to result in dramatic changes in muscle properties that allow many ectothermic fish to maintain activity over a wide range of environmental temperatures (Guderley, 2004). This is in part due to an inverse c...