The physiological basis of diving to depth: birds and mammals

GL Kooyman, PJ Ponganis - Annual review of physiology, 1998 - annualreviews.org
GL Kooyman, PJ Ponganis
Annual review of physiology, 1998annualreviews.org
▪ Abstract There is wide diversity in the animals that dive to depth and in the distribution of
their body oxygen stores. A hallmark of animals diving to depth is a substantial elevation of
muscle myoglobin concentration. In deep divers, more than 80% of the oxygen store is in the
blood and muscles. How these oxygen stores are managed, particularly within muscle, is
unclear. The aerobic endurance of four species has now been measured. These
measurements provide a standard for other species in which the limits cannot be measured …
Abstract
There is wide diversity in the animals that dive to depth and in the distribution of their body oxygen stores. A hallmark of animals diving to depth is a substantial elevation of muscle myoglobin concentration. In deep divers, more than 80% of the oxygen store is in the blood and muscles. How these oxygen stores are managed, particularly within muscle, is unclear. The aerobic endurance of four species has now been measured. These measurements provide a standard for other species in which the limits cannot be measured. Diving to depth requires several adaptations to the effects of pressure. In mammals, one adaptation is lung collapse at shallow depths, which limits absorption of nitrogen. Blood N2 levels remain below the threshold for decompression sickness. No such adaptive model is known for birds. There appear to be two diving strategies used by animals that dive to depth. Seals, for example, seldom rely on anaerobic metabolism. Birds, on the other hand, frequently rely on anaerobic metabolism to exploit prey-rich depths otherwise unavailable to them.
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