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  • Dolphins 'Decompress Like Humans'

    DOLPHINS 'DECOMPRESS LIKE HUMANS'

    ARMENPRESS
    10:06, 15 October, 2011

    Scientists have found tiny bubbles beneath the blubber of dolphins
    that have beached themselves.

    The bubbles were discovered by taking ultrasound scans of the animals
    within minutes of stranding off Cape Cod, US.

    The team's findings help confirm what many researchers have
    long suspected: dolphins avoid the bends by taking long, shallow
    decompression dives after feeding at depth.

    The study is reported in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

    Many biologists believe that marine mammals do not struggle, as human
    divers do, with decompression sickness - "the bends" - when ascending
    from great depths.

    In humans, breathing air at the comparatively high pressures delivered
    by scuba equipment causes more nitrogen to be absorbed into the
    blood and the body's tissues, and this nitrogen comes back out as
    divers ascend.

    If divers ascend too quickly, the dissolved nitrogen forms bubbles
    in the body, causing decompression sickness.

    But marine mammals such as whales, dolphins, and seals are highly
    adept at dealing with the pressures of the deep.

    They slow their hearts, collapse the tiny air-filled chambers in
    their lungs, and channel blood to essential organs - like the brain
    - to conserve oxygen, and limit the build-up of nitrogen bubbles in
    the blood that happens at depth.

    However, veterinary scientist Michael Moore from Woods Hole
    Oceanographic Institute in the US, thinks that it is "naive" to think
    that diving mammals do not also struggle with these laws of chemistry.

    Even marine mammals ascending from the deep must rid themselves of the
    gas that has built up in their tissues, or risk developing the bends.

    If dolphins, he explained, come up too quickly then there is evidence
    that they "grab another gulp of air and go back down again," in much
    the same way a human diver would "re-tank and re-ascend" to try to
    prevent the bends.

    "But there's one place you can't do that [if you are a dolphin]
    and that's sitting on the beach," Dr Moore told BBC News.

    And so when he and his team scanned eight Atlantic white-sided dolphins
    and 14 short-beaked common stranded dolphins using ultrasound,
    they were not surprised to find tiny bubbles below the blubber of
    the animals.

    Because three of the dolphins were scanned within minutes of their
    stranding, the team ruled out the possibility that the air pockets
    were a result of beaching, and instead think that they formed while
    the animals were still in the water.

    Sascha Hooker, a marine mammal ecologist with the Sea Mammal Research
    Unit in St Andrews, UK, commented: "This study is much less about why
    animals strand, and much more about using stranded animals to give us
    a bit more insight [into] what is going on inside live marine mammals.

    "[What's] particularly interesting from this is that the animals that
    were released... survived.

    "So it looks like these animals are able to deal with some bubbles."

    She explained that studying the behaviour and physiology of diving
    animals is incredibly difficult because researchers cannot follow
    them down to the deep.

    Stranded animals, therefore, offer researchers rare access to these
    expert divers to measure what changes they undergo to avoid the bends.

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