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  • We're celebrating Earth's oceans this week

  • with a series of videos about the oceans.

  • We're not just talking about creatures with gills, though,

  • we're also talking about air-breathing animals that have adapted to living and hunting in the ocean

  • because they are really good at holding their breath.

  • Sperm Whales and Elephant Seals can stay underwater for an hour or two

  • which is pretty impressive for marine mammals

  • And the Cuvier's Beaked Whale holds the mammalian title for

  • longest recorded dive at 137 and a half minutes

  • So what is going on in their bodies that make these long dives possible?

  • We need oxygen to help our cells make energy,

  • in a process that also makes carbon dioxide.

  • When you have too much carbon dioxide in your body,

  • it makes your blood more acidic

  • which signals your brain to say "Hey, you need to get oxygen! Breathe now!"

  • So when an animal like a human or whale breathes,

  • the oxygen molecules in the air diffuse from the lungs into tiny blood vessels

  • and bind to a protein inside your red blood cells called hemoglobin.

  • Hemoglobin acts as a delivery truck in your body

  • using the bloodstream as its highway to hand-off oxygen molecules to tissue cells

  • or another protein called myoglobin in muscle cells.

  • Myoglobin is basically extra oxygen storage for your muscles, because they need extra energy when they're active

  • And scientists think that myoglobin is what helps marine mammals hold their breath for so long.

  • For one thing:

  • These diving animals have more hemoglobin and myoglobin than humans,

  • which means they can store more oxygen in their blood and muscles.

  • When the oxygen bound to hemoglobin in their blood runs out,

  • the myoglobin can release extra 02 back into the bloodstream.

  • Plus, we think aquatic mammals have a higher tolerance to dissolved carbon dioxide in their blood,

  • so there might be a less urgent 'need-to-breathe' instinct.

  • And when the animal resurfaces to breathe and prep for another dive,

  • the excess carbon dioxide dissolved in the blood and bound to hemoglobin is released and replaced with fresh oxygen.

  • A 2013 study also found that these:

  • specifically the ones that live on land.

  • Too many myoglobin molecules tend to clump up together in the muscles,

  • and in humans this can cause diseases.

  • But if those molecules have strong asimilar surface charges, they repel each other instead.

  • This means all the extra myoglobin molecules are free to store oxygen and help the animals stay underwater longer.

  • And some animals have other oxygen-saving adaptations as well,

  • like a lower heart rate, and restricted blood supply to tissues.

  • Scientists are still trying to find even more adaptations

  • and understand how they work together in different species to conserve oxygen during these long, deep dives.

  • But if you're waiting for the day when humans can stay underwater for hours without equipment,

  • don't hold your breath!

  • [laughing]

  • Thank you for asking, and thank you especially to Ecology Project International for sponsoring this episode.

  • EPI is an international non-profit organization that works to improve and inspire science education and conservation efforts

  • through student-scientist partnerships.

  • EPI has recently become the steward of the Pacuare Nature Reserve in Costa Rica,

  • which is home to 5% of the world's biodiversity and the 4th most important nesting beach for vulnerable leatherback sea turtles.

  • To sustain the reserve and its majestic wildlife long into the future,

  • EPI has launched an online fundraising campaign.

  • You can help protect the thousands of species of flora and fauna that call Pacuare home

  • Check out EPI's fundraising campaign at crowdrise.com/PreserveProtectPacuare

We're celebrating Earth's oceans this week

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