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吹泡泡:一种水生适应性行为,但却对座头鲸(大翅鲸)呼吸道的保护构成风险。

Blowing bubbles: an aquatic adaptation that risks protection of the respiratory tract in humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae).

作者信息

Reidenberg Joy S, Laitman Jeffrey T

机构信息

Center for Anatomy and Functional Morphology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029, USA.

出版信息

Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2007 Jun;290(6):569-80. doi: 10.1002/ar.20537.

Abstract

Cetaceans (whales, dolphins, and porpoises) have developed extensive protective barriers to exclude water or food from the respiratory tract, including valvular nostrils, an intranarial elongated larynx, and a sphincteric soft palate. A barrier breach can be lethal, as asphyxiation may occur from incursions of water (drowning) or food (choking). Humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae), however, exhibit a possibly unique and paradoxical behavior concerning respiratory protection: they release a "bubble cloud" (a cluster of tiny bubbles) underwater from the mouth. How they do this remains unclear. This study tests the hypothesis that the larynx plays a role in enabling bubble cloud emission. The anatomy and position of the larynx was examined in seven specimens of Megaptera novaeangliae. Results indicate that the epiglottis can be manually removed from behind the soft palate and placed in the oral cavity during dissection. Unlike that of toothed whales (odontocetes), the humpback whale larynx does not appear to be permanently intranarial. The elongated and trough-shaped epiglottis may function as a tube when placed against the undersurface of the soft palate and, thus, facilitate channeling air from the larynx to the oral cavity. The pointed tip and lateral edges of the epiglottis fit tightly against the undersurface of the soft palate, perhaps functioning as a one-way valve that lets air out but prevents water from entering. Bubble cloud generation likely involves air passing directly from the larynx into the oral cavity, and then expulsion through the mesh of the baleen plates. A laryngeal-oral connection, however, compromises the anatomical aquatic adaptations that normally protect the respiratory tract. A potential for drowning exists during the critical interval in which the larynx is intraoral and during re-insertion back to the normal intranarial position. The retention of this risky behavior indicates the importance of bubble clouds in predator avoidance, prey capture, and/or social signaling.

摘要

鲸目动物(鲸鱼、海豚和鼠海豚)已经进化出了广泛的保护屏障,以防止水或食物进入呼吸道,这些屏障包括瓣膜状鼻孔、鼻腔内拉长的喉部以及括约肌软腭。屏障破裂可能是致命的,因为水(溺水)或食物(窒息)的侵入可能导致窒息。然而,座头鲸(大翅鲸)在呼吸保护方面表现出一种可能独特且自相矛盾的行为:它们在水下从口中释放出“气泡云”(一簇微小的气泡)。它们是如何做到这一点的仍不清楚。本研究检验了喉部在使气泡云排放中起作用的假设。对7个大翅鲸标本的喉部解剖结构和位置进行了检查。结果表明,在解剖过程中,会厌可以从软腭后方手动移除并放置在口腔中。与齿鲸不同,座头鲸的喉部似乎并非永久位于鼻腔内。细长且呈槽状的会厌在靠在软腭下表面时可能起到管道的作用,从而便于将空气从喉部引导至口腔。会厌的尖端和侧缘紧密贴合软腭下表面,可能起到单向阀的作用,让空气排出但防止水进入。气泡云的产生可能涉及空气直接从喉部进入口腔,然后通过鲸须板的网孔排出。然而,喉部与口腔的连接破坏了通常保护呼吸道的解剖学水生适应性。在喉部位于口腔内以及重新回到正常鼻腔内位置的关键间隔期间,存在溺水的可能性。这种危险行为的保留表明气泡云在躲避捕食者以及捕获猎物和/或社交信号方面具有重要意义。

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