18 research outputs found

    Tracking the Development of Muscular Myoglobin Stores in Mysticete Calves.

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    For marine mammals, the ability to tolerate apnea and make extended dives is a defining adaptive trait, facilitating the exploitation of marine food resources. Elevated levels of myoglobin within the muscles are a consistent hallmark of this trait, allowing oxygen collected at the surface to be stored in the muscles and subsequently used to support extended dives. In mysticetes, the largest of marine predators, details on muscular myoglobin levels are limited. The developmental trajectory of muscular myoglobin stores has yet to be documented and any physiological links between early behavior and the development of muscular myoglobin stores remain unknown. In this study, we used muscle tissue samples from stranded mysticetes to investigate these issues. Samples from three different age cohorts and three species of mysticetes were included (total sample size = 18). Results indicate that in mysticete calves, muscle myoglobin stores comprise only a small percentage (17-23%) of conspecific adult myoglobin complements. Development of elevated myoglobin levels is protracted over the course of extended maturation in mysticetes. Additionally, comparisons of myoglobin levels between and within muscles, along with details of interspecific differences in rates of accumulation of myoglobin in very young mysticetes, suggest that levels of exercise may influence the rate of development of myoglobin stores in young mysticetes. This new information infers a close interplay between the physiology, ontogeny and early life history of young mysticetes and provides new insight into the pressures that may shape adaptive strategies in migratory mysticetes. Furthermore, the study highlights the vulnerability of specific age cohorts to impending changes in the availability of foraging habitat and marine resources

    Sampling sites used for the provision of muscle tissue samples from mysticetes.

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    <p>(based on Polasek and Davis [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0145893#pone.0145893.ref043" target="_blank">43</a>]). Picture credit: Yvette Hansen.</p

    Early ontogeny of Mb levels in three species of mysticetes.

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    <p>Calf age classes based on growth curves described by <sup>a</sup> [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0145893#pone.0145893.ref044" target="_blank">44</a>], <sup>b</sup> [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0145893#pone.0145893.ref045" target="_blank">45</a>] and <sup>c</sup> [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0145893#pone.0145893.ref046" target="_blank">46</a>], along with additional information from the field site of the necropsy. Estimated ages: Neonates < 2 weeks, young calves between 2 weeks to 3 months and stranded in breeding areas, migrating calves between 3 to 5 months and stranded in migratory corridors. Levels of Mb in the neonate minke whale lay beyond the upper limits of the 95% confidence interval for mean Mb levels in neonate humpback and gray whale calves (4.2 mg Mb g<sup>-1</sup> vs. 0.0<1.5<3.0 mg Mb g<sup>-1</sup>). Levels of Mb rose faster in humpback vs. gray whale calves between the neonate, young and migratory age classes (for humpback whales β = 0.98 and for gray whales β = 0.41). Error bars indicate S.D.</p

    The development trajectory of muscular Mb levels in three species of mysticetes.

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    <p>Differences between age classes and between species were significant (GLM; for age class ANOVA F<sub>2</sub> = 25.532, p = 0.000, for species ANOVA F <sub>2</sub> = 5.671, p = 0.018). Error bars indicate +/- 1 S.E.</p
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