Me. Heath et Sh. Ridgway, How dolphins use their blubber to avoid heat stress during encounters withwarm water, AM J P-REG, 45(4), 1999, pp. R1188-R1194
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Physiology
Journal title
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-REGULATORY INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY
Dolphins have been observed swimming in inshore tropical waters as warm as
36-38 degrees C. A simple protocol that mimicked the thermal conditions enc
ountered by a dolphin moving from cool pelagic to warm inshore water was us
ed to determine how dolphins avoid hyperthermia in water temperatures (T-w)
at and above their normal core temperature (T-c). T-w (2 sites), rectal te
mperature (T-re; 3 depths), and skin temperature (T-sk; 7 sites) and rate o
f heat flow (4-5 sites) between the skin and the environment were measured
while the dolphin rested in a chamber during a 30-min baseline and 40-60 mi
n while water was warmed at similar to 0.43 degrees C/min until temperature
s of 34-36 degrees C were attained. Instead of the expected increase, T-re
consistently showed declines during the warming ramp, sometimes by amounts
that were remarkable both in their magnitude (1.35 degrees C) and rapidity
(8-15 min). The reduction in T-re occurred even while heat loss to the envi
ronment was prevented by continued controlled warming of the water that kep
t T-w slightly above T-sk and while metabolic heat production alone should
have added 1.6-2 degrees C/h to the T-c. This reduction in T-c could only b
e due to a massive redistribution of heat from the core to the blubber laye
r.