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1.
Front Physiol ; 13: 1011869, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36505066

ABSTRACT

Odontocetes are breath-hold divers with a suite of physiological, anatomical, and behavioral adaptations that are highly derived and vastly different from those of their terrestrial counterparts. Because of these adaptations for diving, odontocetes were originally thought to be exempt from the harms of nitrogen gas embolism while diving. However, recent studies have shown that these mammals may alter their dive behavior in response to anthropogenic sound, leading to the potential for nitrogen supersaturation and bubble formation which may cause decompression sickness in the central nervous system (CNS). We examined the degree of interface between blood, gases, and neural tissues in the spinal cord by quantifying its microvascular characteristics in five species of odontocetes (Tursiops truncatus, Delphinus delphis, Grampus griseus, Kogia breviceps, and Mesoplodon europaeus) and a model terrestrial species (the pig-Sus scrofa domesticus) for comparison. This approach allowed us to compare microvascular characteristics (microvascular density, branching, and diameter) at several positions (cervical, thoracic, and lumbar) along the spinal cord from odontocetes that are known to be either deep or shallow divers. We found no significant differences (p < 0.05 for all comparisons) in microvessel density (9.30-11.18%), microvessel branching (1.60-2.12 branches/vessel), or microvessel diameter (11.83-16.079 µm) between odontocetes and the pig, or between deep and shallow diving odontocete species. This similarity of spinal cord microvasculature anatomy in several species of odontocetes as compared to the terrestrial mammal is in contrast to the wide array of remarkable physio-anatomical adaptations marine mammals have evolved within their circulatory system to cope with the physiological demands of diving. These results, and other studies on CNS lipids, indicate that the spinal cords of odontocetes do not have specialized features that might serve to protect them from Type II DCS.

2.
J Morphol ; 282(9): 1415-1431, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34228354

ABSTRACT

The cetacean vertebral canal houses the spinal cord and arterial supply to and venous drainage from the entire central nervous system (CNS). Thus, unlike terrestrial mammals, the cetacean spinal cord lies within a highly vascularized space. We compared spinal cord size and vascular volumes within the vertebral canal across a sample of shallow and deep diving odontocetes. We predicted that the (a) spinal cord, a metabolically expensive tissue, would be relatively small, while (b) volumes of vascular structures would be relatively large, in deep versus shallow divers. Our sample included the shallow diving Tursiops truncatus (n = 2) and Delphinus delphis (n = 3), and deep diving Kogia breviceps (n = 2), Mesoplodon europaeus (n = 2), and Ziphius cavirostris (n = 1). Whole, frozen vertebral columns were cross-sectioned at each intervertebral disc, scaled photographs of vertebral canal contents acquired, and cross-sectional areas of structures digitally measured. Areas were multiplied by vertebral body lengths and summed to calculated volumes of neural and vascular structures. Allometric analyses revealed that the spinal cord scaled with negative allometry (b = 0.51 ± 0.13) with total body mass (TBM), and at a rate significantly lower than that of terrestrial mammals. As predicted, the spinal cord represented a smaller percentage of the total vertebral canal volume in the deep divers relative to shallow divers studied, as low as 2.8% in Z. cavirostris. Vascular volume scaled with positive allometry (b = 1.2 ± 0.22) with TBM and represented up to 96.1% (Z. cavirostris) of the total vertebral canal volume. The extreme deep diving beaked whales possessed 22-35 times more vascular volume than spinal cord volume within the vertebral canal, compared with the 6-10 ratio in the shallow diving delphinids. These data offer new insights into morphological specializations of neural and vascular structures that may contribute to differential diving capabilities across odontocete cetaceans.


Subject(s)
Bottle-Nosed Dolphin , Whales , Animals , Spinal Cord , Spine
3.
J Comp Physiol B ; 191(4): 815-829, 2021 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33973058

ABSTRACT

Marine mammals are exposed to O2-limitation and increased N2 gas concentrations as they dive to exploit habitat and food resources. The lipid-rich tissues (blubber, acoustic, neural) are of particular concern as N2 is five times more soluble in lipid than in blood or muscle, creating body compartments that can become N2 saturated, possibly leading to gas emboli upon surfacing. We characterized lipids in the neural tissues of marine mammals to determine whether they have similar lipid profiles compared to terrestrial mammals. Lipid profiles (lipid content, lipid class composition, and fatty acid signatures) were determined in the neural tissues of 12 cetacean species with varying diving regimes, and compared to two species of terrestrial mammals. Neural tissue lipid profile was not significantly different in marine versus terrestrial mammals across tissue types. Within the marine species, average dive depth was not significantly associated with the lipid profile of cervical spinal cord. Across species, tissue type (brain, spinal cord, and spinal nerve) was a significant factor in lipid profile, largely due to the presence of storage lipids (triacylglycerol and wax ester/sterol ester) in spinal nerve tissue only. The stability of lipid signatures within the neural tissue types of terrestrial and marine species, which display markedly different dive behaviors, points to the consistent role of lipids in these tissues. These findings indicate that despite large differences in the level of N2 gas exposure by dive type in the species examined, the lipids of neural tissues likely do not have a neuroprotective role in marine mammals.


Subject(s)
Diving , Nerve Tissue , Animals , Ecosystem , Lipids , Mammals
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