Tracheobronchial Compression in Diving Marine Mammals: A Hyperbaric Approach
IAAAM 2021
Michael A. Denk1*; Andreas Fahlman2; Sophie Dennison-Gibby4; Zhongchang Song3,5; Michael Moore3
1College of Veterinary Medicine, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, USA; 2Fundación Oceanogràfic de la Comunitat Valenciana Valencia, Spain; 3Biology Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA, USA; 4Televet Imaging Solutions, PLLC, Oakton, VA, USA; 5Key Laboratory of Underwater Acoustic Communication and Marine Information Technology of the Ministry of Education, College of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Xiamen University, Xiamen, People’s Republic of China

Abstract

Assessment of compression dynamics of the marine mammal tracheobronchial tree at depth is crucial to understanding vital physiologic processes such as gas exchange during diving.1,2 Study of the unique anatomy of marine mammal airways has led to much thought regarding the possible compression of these structures under pressure.3,4 No studies to date have quantified changes in tracheobronchial volume with increasing diving pressures in cetaceans or pinnipeds. A freshly deceased harbor seal, grey seal, harp seal, harbor porpoise, and common dolphin were imaged post-mortem via CT in a radiolucent hyperbaric chamber as previously described by Moore et al. (2011).5 Volume reconstructions of the trachea and bronchi of the pinnipeds and bronchi of the cetaceans provided volume measurements of all airways for each simulated diving treatment. Significant decreases in airway volume with increasing pressure occurred in all species, with the harbor seal and common dolphin nearing complete collapse at the highest pressures. Differences between 50% and 100% lung inflation treatments in the common dolphin indicated the importance of air in maintaining patent airways, and caudal to cranial airway collapse patterns were observed. These findings indicate potential species-specific variability in tracheobronchial compliance, and that cessation of gas exchange may occur at greater depths than that predicted in models assuming rigid airways. This may increase the likelihood of decompression sickness in these animals during diving.6

Acknowledgements

We wish to thank the following for their technical advice and assistance: Nicholas Hemphill and Katie Tucker-Mohl, VMD, DAVCR, Marina Ivančić, DVM, DAVCR and Debra A. Fiorito, DVM, FAVD, DAVDC. We also recognize the help of Darlene Ketten, Julie Arruda and Scott Cramer in generating the original data, a project funded by US Office of Naval Research Award Number: N000140811220. Deceased animals were received under NOAA permit no. 932-1905-00/MA-009526 if fishery bycaught, and under a letter from the NOAA Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office to M.M. if stranded.

*Presenting author

Literature Cited

1.  Scholander PF. 1940. Experimental investigations on the respiratory function in diving mammals and birds. Hvalrådets Skrifter 22:1–131.

2.  Bostrom BL, Fahlman A, Jones DR. 2008. Tracheal compression delays alveolar collapse during deep diving in marine mammals. Respir Physiol Neurobiol 161:298–305.

3.  Bagnoli P, Cozzi B, Zaffora A, Acocella F, Fumero R, Costantino ML. 2011. Experimental and computational biomechanical characterization of the tracheo-bronchial tree of the bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus). J Biomech 44:1040–1045.

4.  Cozzi B, Bagnoli P, Acocella F, Constantino ML. 2005. Structure and biomechanical properties of the trachea of the striped dolphin Stenella coeruleoalba: evidence for evolutionary adaptations to diving. Anat Rec A 284A:500–510.

5.  Moore MJ, Hammar T, Arruda J, Cramer S, Dennison S, Montie E, Fahlman A. 2011. Hyperbaric computed tomographic measurement of lung compression in seals and dolphins. J Exp Biol 214:2390–2397.

6.  Fahlman A. 2017. Allometric scaling of decompression sickness risk in terrestrial mammals: cardiac output explains risk of decompression sickness. Sci Rep 7:1–9.

 

Speaker Information
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Michael Denk
College of Veterinary Medicine
Kansas State University
Manhattan, KS, USA


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