First published online November 30, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 4279-4285 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.011221
Returning on empty: extreme blood O2 depletion underlies dive capacity of emperor penguins
P. J. Ponganis*,
T. K. Stockard,
J. U. Meir,
C. L. Williams,
K. V. Ponganis,
R. P. van Dam and
R. Howard
Center for Marine Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Scripps Institution
of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0204,
USA

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Fig. 1. Dive duration (A) and maximum depth (B) histograms of dives of emperor
penguins equipped with backpack intravascular
PO2 recorders (N=142).
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Fig. 3. Venous PO2 and depth profiles from a 23.1
min dive. This shallow (<60 m maximum depth) dive is currently the longest
reported dive of an emperor penguin. The blood O2 store was
optimized in this bird (EP 19) with a pre-dive venous
PO2 of 63 mmHg, which was equivalent to
arterial values of birds at rest. PO2 gradually
declined throughout the dive to a final value of 6 mmHg and then returned to
pre-dive levels within 3 min. Grey background indicates dive time.
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Fig. 4. Final PO2 and dive duration. Final
PO2 values were recorded within the last 15 s
of each dive. (A) Final venous PO2 and dive
duration from nine emperor penguins (key shows individual symbols for each
penguin). The variability in final PO2 values
in relation to dive duration is presumably secondary to differences in
metabolic rates during dives. In addition, the span of
PO2 values at the aerobic dive limit (ADL)
clearly indicates that the blood O2 store is not depleted at this
limit, the dive duration associated with post-dive lactate accumulation. The
exponential regression
(y=96.416e–0.1216x,
r2=0.94, P<0.001) was constructed from the highest
final PO2 during each 1-min interval of dive
duration. This represents the minimum rate at which final
PO2 declines in relation to dive duration. (B)
Comparison of final venous PO2, arterial
PO2 and air sac
PO2
(Stockard et al., 2005 )
demonstrates that air sac, arterial and venous
PO2 values become indistinguishable in longer
dives.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2007