How dolphins use their blubber to avoid heat stress during encounters withwarm water

Citation
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
ISSN journal
03636119 → ACNP
Volume
45
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
R1188 - R1194
Database
ISI
SICI code
0363-6119(199904)45:4<R1188:HDUTBT>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
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.