Everything about Blubber totally explained
» This article is about the body tissue. For the Judy Blume novel, see Blubber (novel):
For the fictional bear called Blubber, see Wacky Races
Blubber is a thick layer of
vascularized fat found under the skin of all
cetaceans,
pinnipeds and
sirenians.
Description
Lipid-rich blubber comprises the
hypodermis and covers the whole body, except for the appendages, loosely attached to the musculature. It can comprise up to 50% of the body mass of some marine mammals
Function
Blubber serves several different functions. it's the primary location of fat on some
mammals, and is essential for storing energy. It is particularly important for species which feed and breed in different parts of the ocean. During these periods the species are operating on a fat-based
metabolism. Recent research also shows that blubber may save further energy for marine mammals such as dolphins in that it adds bounce to a dolphin's swim.
Blubber is, however, different from other forms of
adipose tissue in its extra thickness, which allows it to serve as an efficient thermal
insulator, making blubber essential for
thermoregulation. Blubber is also more vascularized, or rich in blood vessels, than other adipose tissue.
Blubber has advantages over
fur (as in
Sea Otters) in the respect that although fur can retain heat by holding pockets of air, the air pockets will be expelled under pressure (while diving). Blubber, however, doesn't compress under pressure. It is effective enough that some whales can dwell in temperatures as low as -40 degrees Fahrenheit. While diving in cold water, blood vessels covering the blubber constrict and decrease blood flow, thus increasing blubber's efficiency as an insulator.
Blubber can also aid in
buoyancy, and acts to streamline the body.
Research into the thermal conductivity of
the common bottlenose dolphin's blubber reveals that its thickness varies greatly amongst individuals. However, blubber from emaciated dolphins is a much worse of an insulator than that of non-pregnant adults, which in turn have a higher heat conductivity than blubber from pregnant females and pre-adults.
Human Influences
Uses
Muktuk, (the Inuit/Eskimo word for blubber) formed an important part of the traditional diets of the
Inuit and other northernly peoples because of its high energy value. Diets high in blubber from sea mammals have a preventative effect on cardiovascular diseases like
atherosclerosis. Seal blubber has large amounts of
Vitamin E,
selenium, and other
anti-oxidants that hinder oxidation, which slows the formation of the
free radicals that start a wide variety of diseases. The positive effects of consuming blubber can be seen in Greenland; in
Uummannaq for example, a hunting district with 3000 residents, no deaths due to cardiovascular diseases occurred in the 1970's. However, emigrants to Denmark have contracted the same diseases as the rest of the population. The average 70-year-old Inuit with a traditional diet of whale and seal has arteries as elastic as that of a 20-year-old Danish resident.
One of the major reasons for the
whaling trade was the collection of whale blubber. This was rendered down into
oil in
try pots or later, in vats on factory ships. The oil could be then used in the manufacture of soap, leather, and cosmetics. Whale oil was also used in candles as wax, and in
oil lamps as fuel.
Blue whales can yield blubber harvests up to 50 tons.
Toxicity
Recent studies suggest that blubber contains naturally occurring PCB, which are cancer causing and damage the human nervous, immune and reproductive systems. . It isn't known where the source of this PCB is. Since toothed whales typically place high on the food chain, they're bound to consume large amounts of industrial pollutants. Even baleen whales, by merit of the huge amount of food they consume, are bound to have toxic chemicals stored in their bodies. Recent studies have found high levels of mercury in the blubber of seals of the Canadian arctic.
Works Cited
Further Information
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