4.8 Article

Extreme bradycardia and tachycardia in the world's largest animal

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1914273116

Keywords

scaling; heart rate; cardiac function; blue whale; diving

Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research [N000141912455]
  2. Terman Fellowship from Stanford University
  3. John B. McKee Fund (2018) at Scripps Institution of Oceanography
  4. U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) [N000141912455] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Defense (DOD)

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The biology of the blue whale has long fascinated physiologists because of the animal's extreme size. Despite high energetic demands from a large body, low mass-specific metabolic rates are likely powered by low heart rates. Diving bradycardia should slow blood oxygen depletion and enhance dive time available for foraging at depth. However, blue whales exhibit a high-cost feeding mechanism, lunge feeding, whereby large volumes of prey-laden water are intermittently engulfed and filtered during dives. This paradox of such a large, slowly beating heart and the high cost of lunge feeding represents a unique test of our understanding of cardiac function, hemodynamics, and physiological limits to body size. Here, we used an electrocardiogram (ECG)-depth recorder tag to measure blue whale heart rates during foraging dives as deep as 184 mand as long as 16.5 min. Heart rates during dives were typically 4 to 8 beats min(-1) (bpm) and as low as 2 bpm, while after-dive surface heart rates were 25 to 37 bpm, near the estimated maximum heart rate possible. Despite extreme bradycardia, we recorded a 2.5-fold increase above diving heart rate minima during the powered ascent phase of feeding lunges followed by a gradual decrease of heart rate during the prolonged glide as engulfed water is filtered. These heart rate dynamics explain the unique hemodynamic design in rorqual whales consisting of a large-diameter, highly compliant, elastic aortic arch that allows the aorta to accommodate blood ejected by the heart and maintain blood flow during the long and variable pauses between heartbeats.

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