Study offers new hypothesis,
highlights role that sonar plays in strandings
Date: April 25, 2018
Source: Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Deep-diving whales and other
marine mammals can get the bends -- the same painful and potentially
life-threatening decompression sickness that strikes scuba divers who surface
too quickly. A new study offers a hypothesis of how marine mammals generally
avoid getting the bends and how they can succumb under stressful conditions.
The key is the unusual lung
architecture of whales, dolphins and porpoises (and possibly other
breath-holding diving vertebrates), which creates two different pulmonary
regions under deep-sea pressure, say researchers at the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) and the Fundacion Oceanografic in Spain. Their
study was published April 25, 2018, in the journal Proceedings of the
Royal Society B.
"How some marine mammals and
turtles can repeatedly dive as deep and as long as they do has perplexed scientists
for a very long time," says Michael Moore, director of the Marine Mammal
Center at WHOI and co-author of the study. "This paper opens a window
through which we can take a new perspective on the question."
When air-breathing mammals dive
to high-pressure depths, their lungs compress. That collapses their alveoli --
the tiny sacs at the end of the airways where gas exchange occurs. Nitrogen
bubbles build up in the animals' bloodstream and tissue. If they ascend slowly,
the nitrogen can return to the lungs and be exhaled. But if they ascend too
fast, the nitrogen bubbles don't have time to diffuse back into the lungs.
Under less pressure at shallower depths, the nitrogen bubbles expand in the
bloodstream and tissue, causing pain and damage.
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