
BASKING IN THE COLD: Weddell seals in Antarctica.
Image: ISTOCKPHOTO.COM/OVERSNAP
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Whales, dolphins, seals and other marine mammals can generate their own heat and maintain a stable body temperature despite fluctuating environmental conditions. Like people, they are endothermic homeotherms—or more colloquially, "warm-blooded."
But these animals take thermoregulation to an extreme, enduring water temperatures as low as –2 degrees Celsius (28.4 degrees Fahrenheit) and air temperatures reaching –40 degrees C (–40 degrees F).
How do they pull it off? And don't they ever feel cold? Disputatore, one of ScientificAmerican.com's fellow Twitterers recently asked, prompting us to investigate. We talked to Ann Pabst, a marine zoologist at the University of North Carolina Wilmington, who helped us understand how marine mammals survive the bitter cold.
[An edited transcript of the interview follows.]
How cold can liquid seawater get?
Polar oceanic water can get as cold as about –2 degrees C. Even seawater in temperate or tropical regions might drop as low as –1 degree C [30.2 degrees F] if you go deep enough below the surface.
[You may be wondering why water at -1 or -2 degrees C is not ice. Because seawater contains salt, it freezes at a slightly lower temperature than freshwater, which turns to ice at 0 degree C (32 degrees F). This is because the sodium and chloride in salt actually interfere with the water molecules' ability to come together and form ice crystals.—Editor's Note]
Can whales, dolphins and other marine mammals thrive in these frigid waters?
Certain species of pinnipeds—which include walruses, seals and sea lions—and some whales, dolphins and porpoises thrive in these conditions. Specific examples include humpback whales, blue whales—the largest animals on Earth—killer whales, Weddell seals and elephant seals.
Is there any evidence they can "feel" the cold like humans do?
Their skin is innervated with temperature-sensing nerve cells just as is the skin of any mammal.* They certainly have the ability to sense temperature, but how that translates to what they feel [whether they experience discomfort, for example] is a hard question to answer. But they certainly respond to temperature stimuli.
Whales and other marine mammals maintain a core body temperature similar to ours—about 37 degrees C (99 degrees F). How do they manage to do this under such extreme conditions?
They have two general types of responses: behavioral and physiological. A typical behavior response is migration. In the winter, pregnant right whales—which are endangered, partly a consequence of being entangled in fishing gear or being struck by boats—migrate from waters off Canada and New England to the coastal waters of Georgia and Florida to birth their young.




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4 Comments
Add CommentWalruses, seals, sea lions, some whales, dolphins and porpoises have no difficulty in Arctic conditions where as you state Polar oceanic water can get as cold as about 2 degrees C. These species don't typically "feel cold," as their species were evolved in those environments and are perfectly adapted to those temperatures. Many Arctic fish also contain antifreeze compounds in their blood. Our species, Homo sapiens, in contrast, evolved in east Africa 200,000 years ago -- which is why we could not survive long without a heavy wetsuit in Arctic waters.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this"enervated " should be "innervated."
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this/Spelling Nazi :)
isn't also the arctic underwater mamals' fur covered in fat in order to keep the water from getting in direct contact with the skin?
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisSurprised you don't mention a really interesting cold-coping mechanism in cetaceans -- countercurrent heat exchange -- where arteries in extremities are surrounded by veins, thus slightly warming blood in the veins before it returns to the body!
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