Heart rate of blue whale measured for the first time.  

O.R.C. Communications Team • 26 November 2019

A new study has revealed the heart rate of the largest mammal on Earth, the blue whale, which operates at the extremes of physiological capability may limit the whale's size.

A decade ago, marine scientists who attached trackers to emperor penguins ( Aptenodytes forsteri ) at McMurdo Station in Antarctica, while monitoring their heart-rates as the birds dove in the icy waters of the Southern Ocean, got thinking; they could use the same technology on larger marine animals, such blue whales.

The blue whale is the largest animal that has ever lived and can weigh up to 200 tonnes or 441K pounds, and reach 30 meters in length - the size of an aeroplane or three school buses. The blue whale's heart can weigh up to 180 kg, more than a fully grown cow, but is still only about 1% of the total body weight.

Blue whales have fascinated Marine scientists and anyone lucky enough to encounter the magnificent animal for generations. These whales belong to the Baleen family, so are toothless and instead have baleen, a bristle like structure that hangs from their upper jaw and allows them to filter feed small prey like krill and forage fishes. Baleen is made of keratin, the same substance our fingernails are made of.

While feeding, whales swim through bait balls or high density areas of prey, engulfing huge amounts of seawater and releasing it through their baleen, filtering their prey. During foraging dives, this new study has been found that blue whales, lower their heart rate.

Generally, larger animals have a slower heart rates. For example, a human's heart rate at rest beats 60 to 100 times each minute. It increases to about 200 beats/ minute during exercise. The smallest mammals, such as shrews, have heart rates of more than 1000 beats per minute.

New research published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences has measured the heart rate of a blue whale for the first time! Using an electrocardiogram; a non-invasive suction cup satellite tag with attached electrodes, equipped with a camera; the researchers collected 9 hours of data on a 22-meter-long male from the Pacific Ocean off the coast of California. The researchers connected the special recording device to a long pole and as the whale surfaced to breathe, they quickly deployed the device as close to the animals heart as possible. They successfully attached the device just below the left flipper.

Image credit: Alex Boersma.

Marine Biologist, Jeremy Goldbogen, from Stanford University, led the research team that found that the heart of a blue whale can slow down to just four to eight beats per minute but can be as low as two beats per minute on a deep dive, when the animal is searching for food. The highest heart rate they recorded through-out the study was 25- 37 beats per minute after the whale returned to the surface to breathe and restore its oxygen levels.

According to the official press release, the results were surprising, indicating the whale’s lowest heart rate was 30 to 50% lower than predicted.
The results also revealed that the blue whale’s longest dive duration was 16.5 minutes and reached a depth of >180 meters. The maximum time period the blue whale spent at the sea surface was no longer than 4 minutes.

This study has important implications for understanding the physiological limits of the blue whale’s heart which has been shown to be operating at its limit, which may explain why blue whales have never evolved to be an even larger size. The data also suggested that some anatomical adaptations or unique features of the whale’s heart might, help it perform at these extremes. For example, the scientists concluded that the surprisingly low heart rate could be explained by "an elastic heart" or stretchy aortic arch. The aortic arch functions to move blood out to the body – which, in the case of the blue whale, contracts slowly to maintain additional blood flow in between beats. Interstingly, the extremely high heart rates may be characteristic of the heart’s movement and shape that prevent the pressure waves of each beat from disrupting blood flow.

These research efforts provide fundamental knowledge of the biology large baleen whales and can inform conservation efforts. Furthermore, as the whale’s heart is performing near its limits, the scientists think that this may help explain why no animal has ever been larger than a blue whale – because the energy needs of a larger body would outpace what the heart could sustain.

“Animals that are operating at physiological extremes can help us understand biological limits to size,” said Goldbogen. “They may also be particularly susceptible to changes in their environment that could affect their food supply. Therefore, these studies may have important implications for the conservation and management of endangered species like blue whales.”

Now, the researchers will add more capabilities to the tag, including an accelerometer, which will help them to better understand how different activities or behaviours affect the heart rate.

© Ocean Research & Conservation Ireland (ORCireland) and www.orcireland.ie , est. 2017. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Ocean Research & Conservation Ireland and www.orcireland.ie with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

References:

Goldbogen, J.A., Cade, D.E., Calambokidis, J., Czapanskiy, M. F., Fahlbusch, M. F., Friedlaender, A. S., Gough, W. T., Kahane-Rapport, S. R. Savoca, M. S., Ponganis,K. V. and Ponganis, P. J. (2019). Extreme bradycardia and tachycardia in the world’s largest animal. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1914273116.

https://news.stanford.edu/press-releases/2019/11/25/first-ever-recorhales-heart-rate/


SHARE THIS ARTICLE

by ORCA SciComm Team 5 September 2022
Bird Flu is a serious threat to Irish Gannet Colonies. ORCA SCI-COMM TEAM | 04 September 2022 ORCA Ireland are deeply concerned about the severe epidemic of bird flu of the H5N1 strain, which is highly pathogenic in cases of pelagic seabirds and has now hit seabirds in Irish waters. According to top scientists at the University College Cork (UCC), avian influenza has now reached Irish Gannet colonies. Recent reports from Irish scientists and members of the public have indicated a huge increase in the numbers of dead northern gannets off the Irish coasts. These increases in seabird deaths may be linked to the Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (H5N1).
by ORCA SciComm Team 14 July 2022
PCB Pollution Threatens Global Killer whale ( Orcinus orca ) Populations. ORCA SciComm Team | 14th July 2022 Global killer whale population are predicted to collapse due to pollution with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). A scientific report which used individual-based models combined with globally available data on PCB concentrations found that PCB-mediated effects on reproduction and immune function threaten the longterm viability of >50% of the world’s killer whale populations.
by ORCA SciComm Team 29 April 2022
Russian Navy Trained Dolphins Deployed in Crimea ORCA SciComm Team | 29th April 2022 Russian Navy Trained Dolphins may have been deployed in Crimea, with two sea pens having been spotted at one of their bases in satellite imagery since the start of the Ukraine invasion in February, according to the US Naval Institute.
by Danielle Brennan | Communications Officer 15 March 2022
FEMALE KILLER WHALES FACE GREATER IMPACT FROM NOISE POLLUTION Danielle Brennan | Communications Officer | 15th March 2022
by ORCA SciComm Team 1 March 2022
A solitary common dolphin can speak porpoise language! ORCA SciComm Team | 1st of March 2022 A new paper published in “ Bioacoustics - The International Journal of animal sound and its Recording ” has detailed how a solitary common dolphin in Scotland has learned to speak porpoise language!
by ORCA SciComm Team 4 February 2022
Iceland to end whaling in 2024 with drop in demand for whale meat. ORCA SciComm Team | 4th February 2022 Iceland have announced an end to commercial whale hunts in 2024, after a government minister commented there was "little justification for the practice". Whaling in Iceland is no longer profitable, due to a decrease in the consumption of whale meat and since Japan re-commenced whaling operations after a three decade hiatus in 2019.
by ORCA SciComm Team 25 January 2022
RUSSIAN MILITARY TESTS THREATEN WHALES IN IRISH WATERS ORCA SciComm Team | 25th of January 2022
by ORCA SciComm Team 11 December 2021
Shell Oil & Gas Seismic Surveys Threaten Whales off South Africa ORCA SCI-COMM TEAM | 11th of December 2021 Across the globe there is public outrage due to the planned seismic surveys to search for oil and gas deposits off South Africa's Wild Coast by energy company Shell. Environmental NGO's, Human Rights Organisations and local fishing communities are trying to stop the seismic surveys through litigation, due to the harmful impact seismic surveys can have on marine wildlife. South Africa is home to 37 species of whales and dolphins, but these anthropogenic activities threaten the survival of wild whales off Africa's south coast. Let's dive deeper to investigate what seismic surveys are and how they can harm whales!
by ORCA SciComm Team 9 December 2021
How to Create a Sustainable Wardrobe! ORCA SciComm Team - 9th December '21 The idea of creating a sustainable or ethical wardrobe from scratch is, without a doubt a challenging task. You may not be able to wear the brands you are used to, limiting your choices in terms of trends, not to mention having to spend a little more than you would normally. All of these are valid concerns, but creating a sustainable wardrobe isn't as hard as you may think. Read on to find out tips and tricks to help you transition from a "fast fashion" foe to a "slow fashion" soul sista!
by ORCA SciComm Team 4 December 2021
Russian “Whale Jail” finally Abolished. ORCA SciComm Team | 3rd of December 2021 The incommodious confined pens in Russia’s infamous “Whale Jail” have finally been abolished to ensure marine mammals will not be held in these captive facilities in the future!
Show More