Ontogenetic changes in tracheal structure facilitate deep dives and cold water foraging in adult leatherback sea turtles

John Davenport, John Fraher, Ed Fitzgerald, Patrick McLaughlin, Tom Doyle, Luke Harman, Tracy Cuffe, Peter Dockery

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

20 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Adult leatherbacks are large animals (300-500kg), overlapping in size with marine pinniped and cetacean species. Unlike marine mammals, they start their aquatic life as 40-50g hatchlings, so undergo a 10,000-fold increase in body mass during independent existence. Hatchlings are limited to the tropics and near-surface water. Adults, obligate predators on gelatinous plankton, encounter cold water at depth (<1280m) or high latitude and are gigantotherms that maintain elevated core body temperatures in cold water. This study shows that there are great ontogenetic changes in tracheal structure related to diving and exposure to cold. Hatchling leatherbacks have a conventional reptilian tracheal structure with circular cartilaginous rings interspersed with extensive connective tissue. The adult trachea is an almost continuous ellipsoidal cartilaginous tube composed of interlocking plates, and will collapse easily in the upper part of the water column during dives, thus avoiding pressure-related structural and physiological problems. It is lined with an extensive, dense erectile vascular plexus that will warm and humidify cold inspired air and possibly retain heat on expiration. A sub-luminal lymphatic plexus is also present. Mammals and birds have independently evolved nasal turbinates to fulfil such a respiratory thermocontrol function; for them, turbinates are regarded as diagnostic of endothermy. This is the first demonstration of a turbinate equivalent in a living reptile.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3440-3447
Number of pages8
JournalThe Journal of experimental biology
Volume212
Issue number21
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2009

Keywords

  • Dermochelys
  • Diving
  • Gigantothermy
  • Leatherback turtle
  • Tracheal structure
  • Vascular plexus

Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)

  • Authors
  • Davenport, J; Fraher, J; Fitzgerald, E; McLaughlin, P; Doyle, T; Harman, L; Cuffe, T; Dockery, P;
  • Davenport, J,Fraher, J,Fitzgerald, E,McLaughlin, P,Doyle, T,Harman, L,Cuffe, T,Dockery, P

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