Gabler Molly K, Gay D Mark, Westgate Andrew J, Koopman Heather N
Department of Biology and Marine Biology, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, North Carolina, 28403.
J Morphol. 2018 Apr;279(4):458-471. doi: 10.1002/jmor.20782. Epub 2017 Nov 27.
Odontocetes have specialized mandibular fats, the extramandibular (EMFB) and intramandibular fat bodies (IMFB), which function as acoustic organs, receiving and channeling sound to the ear during hearing and echolocation. Recent strandings of beaked whales suggest that these fat bodies are susceptible to nitrogen (N ) gas embolism and empirical evidence has shown that the N solubility of these fat bodies is higher than that of blubber. Since N gas will diffuse from blood into tissue at any blood/tissue interface and potentially form gas bubbles upon decompression, it is imperative to understand the extent of microvascularity in these specialized acoustic fats so that risk of embolism formation when diving can be estimated. Microvascular density was determined in the EMFB, IMFB, and blubber from 11 species representing three odontocete families. In all cases, the acoustic tissues had less (typically 1/3 to 1/2) microvasculature than did blubber, suggesting that capillary density in the acoustic tissues may be more constrained than in the blubber. However, even within these constraints there were clear phylogenetic differences. Ziphiid (Mesoplodon and Ziphius, 0.9 ± 0.4% and 0.7 ± 0.3% for EMFB and IMFB, respectively) and Kogiid families (1.2 ± 0.2% and 1.0 ± 0.01% for EMFB and IMFB, respectively) had significantly lower mean microvascular densities in the acoustic fats compared to the Delphinid species (Tursiops, Grampus, Stenella, and Globicephala, 1.3 ± 0.3% and 1.3 ± 0.3% for EMFB and IMFB, respectively). Overall, deep-diving beaked whales had less microvascularity in both mandibular fats and blubber compared to the shallow-diving Delphinids, which might suggest that there are differences in the N dynamics associated with diving regime, phylogeny, and tissue type. These novel data should be incorporated into diving physiology models to further understand potential functional disruption of the acoustic tissues due to changes in normal diving behavior.
齿鲸拥有特殊的下颌脂肪,即下颌外脂肪体(EMFB)和下颌内脂肪体(IMFB),它们作为听觉器官发挥作用,在听觉和回声定位过程中接收声音并将其传导至耳朵。最近喙鲸搁浅事件表明,这些脂肪体易受氮气(N₂)气体栓塞影响,且经验证据显示这些脂肪体的N₂溶解度高于鲸脂。由于N₂气体会在任何血液/组织界面从血液扩散到组织中,并在减压时可能形成气泡,因此必须了解这些特殊听觉脂肪中的微血管分布情况,以便估计潜水时形成栓塞的风险。测定了代表三个齿鲸科的11个物种的EMFB、IMFB和鲸脂中的微血管密度。在所有情况下,听觉组织的微血管比鲸脂少(通常为1/3至1/2),这表明听觉组织中的毛细血管密度可能比鲸脂中的更受限制。然而,即使在这些限制范围内,也存在明显的系统发育差异。与海豚科物种(宽吻海豚、虎鲸、条纹原海豚和领航鲸,EMFB和IMFB的微血管密度分别为1.3±0.3%和1.3±0.3%)相比,喙鲸科(中喙鲸属和柯氏喙鲸,EMFB和IMFB的微血管密度分别为0.9±0.4%和0.7±0.3%)和小抹香鲸科(EMFB和IMFB的微血管密度分别为1.2±0.2%和1.0±0.01%)的听觉脂肪中的平均微血管密度显著较低。总体而言,与浅潜的海豚科动物相比,深潜的喙鲸在下颌脂肪和鲸脂中的微血管都较少,这可能表明与潜水方式、系统发育和组织类型相关的N₂动态存在差异。这些新数据应纳入潜水生理模型,以进一步了解正常潜水行为变化导致的听觉组织潜在功能破坏。