Flekkøy Eirik G, Folkow Lars P, Kjelstrup Signe, Mason Matthew J, Wilhelmsen Øivind
PoreLab, Department of Chemistry, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NTNU, Trondheim, Norway.
Department of Arctic and Marine Biology, University of Tromsø - the Arctic University of Norway, Norway.
J Therm Biol. 2023 Feb;112:103402. doi: 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2022.103402. Epub 2023 Jan 6.
Mammals possess complex structures in their nasal cavities known as respiratory turbinate bones, which help the animal to conserve body heat and water during respiratory gas exchange. We considered the function of the maxilloturbinates of two species of seals, one arctic (Erignathus barbatus), one subtropical (Monachus monachus). By means of a thermo-hydrodynamic model that describes the heat and water exchange in the turbinate region we are able to reproduce the measured values of expired air temperatures in grey seals (Halichoerus grypus), a species for which experimental data are available. At the lowest environmental temperatures, however, this is only possible in the arctic seal, and only if we allow for the possibility of ice forming on the outermost turbinate region. At the same time the model predicts that for the arctic seals, the inhaled air is brought to deep body temperature and humidity conditions in passing the maxilloturbinates. The modeling shows that heat and water conservation go together in the sense that one effect implies the other, and that the conservation is most efficient and most flexible in the typical environment of both species. By controlling the blood flow through the turbinates the arctic seal is able to vary the heat and water conservation substantially at its average habitat temperatures, but not at temperatures around -40 °C. The subtropical species has simpler maxilloturbinates, and our model predicts that it is unable to bring inhaled air to deep body conditions, even in its natural environment, without some congestion of the vascular mucosa covering the maxilloturbinates. Physiological control of both blood flow rate and mucosal congestion is expected to have profound effects on the heat exchange function of the maxilloturbinates in seals.
哺乳动物的鼻腔中拥有复杂的结构,即呼吸鼻甲骨骼,这有助于动物在呼吸气体交换过程中保存体温和水分。我们研究了两种海豹的上颌鼻甲的功能,一种是北极海豹(髯海豹),另一种是亚热带海豹(地中海僧海豹)。通过一个描述鼻甲区域热交换和水分交换的热流体动力学模型,我们能够重现灰海豹(港海豹)呼出空气温度的测量值,灰海豹有可用的实验数据。然而,在最低环境温度下,只有在北极海豹中才有可能做到这一点,而且只有当我们考虑到最外层鼻甲区域可能结冰的情况时才行。同时,该模型预测,对于北极海豹来说,吸入的空气在通过上颌鼻甲时会达到身体深部的温度和湿度条件。建模结果表明,热量和水分的保存是相辅相成的,一种效应意味着另一种效应,而且在这两种海豹的典型环境中,这种保存最为有效和灵活。通过控制流经鼻甲的血流量,北极海豹能够在其平均栖息地温度下大幅改变热量和水分的保存情况,但在-40°C左右的温度下则无法做到。亚热带海豹的上颌鼻甲结构更简单,我们的模型预测,即使在其自然环境中,它也无法将吸入的空气调节到身体深部的条件,除非覆盖上颌鼻甲的血管黏膜出现一些充血。预计血流量和黏膜充血的生理控制对海豹上颌鼻甲的热交换功能会产生深远影响。