Effects of Suckling and the Postsuckling Fast on Weights of the Body and Internal Organs of Harp and Hooded Seal Pups

The weights of harp seal pups quadruple during 13 days of suckling while hooded seal pups double in weight in a lactation period of just 4 days. Pups of both species then fast for a month or longer. As a first measure of tissue responses to this ‘feast and famine’ pattern, we weighed the body, sculp...

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Published in:Neonatology
Main Authors: Oftedal, Olav T., Bowen, Don, Widdowson, Elsie M., Boness, Daryl J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: S. Karger AG 1989
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000243136
https://www.karger.com/Article/Pdf/243136
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spelling crskarger:10.1159/000243136 2024-09-30T14:36:13+00:00 Effects of Suckling and the Postsuckling Fast on Weights of the Body and Internal Organs of Harp and Hooded Seal Pups Oftedal, Olav T. Bowen, Don Widdowson, Elsie M. Boness, Daryl J. 1989 http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000243136 https://www.karger.com/Article/Pdf/243136 en eng S. Karger AG https://www.karger.com/Services/SiteLicenses https://www.karger.com/Services/SiteLicenses Neonatology volume 56, issue 5, page 283-300 ISSN 1661-7800 1661-7819 journal-article 1989 crskarger https://doi.org/10.1159/000243136 2024-09-18T04:06:46Z The weights of harp seal pups quadruple during 13 days of suckling while hooded seal pups double in weight in a lactation period of just 4 days. Pups of both species then fast for a month or longer. As a first measure of tissue responses to this ‘feast and famine’ pattern, we weighed the body, sculp (blubber and attached skin), core (carcass including viscera) and major internal organs of seal pups at birth, at the end of suckling, and at the end of the fast. When expressed as a percentage of body weight, the weights of the internal organs of newborn harp and hooded seals were within the range reported for newborn land mammals. During suckling, harp and hooded seals gained 2.3 and 6.5 kg/day body weight, respectively, but a large part (64–73 %) of this gain was blubber and skin rather than core. Even though pups were ingesting great quantities of fat, their digestive organs (stomach, small and large intestines, pancreas) were neither particularly large at birth nor did these organs gain in weight or length unusually rapidly. Most organs increased in weight in proportion to the increase in core weight, but the liver and spleen increased proportionately more than the core, and the stomach, heart and kidneys increased proportionately less. At the end of suckling, sculp accounted for more than half of the body weight in both species. The subsequent 4-week fast resulted in weight loss from both the sculp and core, and the liver and spleen decreased in weight by about 70%. The net effect of sequential suckling and fasting was particularly striking in the hooded seal pup, which had a lighter core, heart, liver and spleen at 1 month postpartum than at birth. These data illustrate a remarkable cycle of nutrient deposition and depletion which is undoubtedly central to the survival of young seals in the harsh pack-ice environment. Article in Journal/Newspaper Harp Seal hooded seal Karger Neonatology 56 5 283 300
institution Open Polar
collection Karger
op_collection_id crskarger
language English
description The weights of harp seal pups quadruple during 13 days of suckling while hooded seal pups double in weight in a lactation period of just 4 days. Pups of both species then fast for a month or longer. As a first measure of tissue responses to this ‘feast and famine’ pattern, we weighed the body, sculp (blubber and attached skin), core (carcass including viscera) and major internal organs of seal pups at birth, at the end of suckling, and at the end of the fast. When expressed as a percentage of body weight, the weights of the internal organs of newborn harp and hooded seals were within the range reported for newborn land mammals. During suckling, harp and hooded seals gained 2.3 and 6.5 kg/day body weight, respectively, but a large part (64–73 %) of this gain was blubber and skin rather than core. Even though pups were ingesting great quantities of fat, their digestive organs (stomach, small and large intestines, pancreas) were neither particularly large at birth nor did these organs gain in weight or length unusually rapidly. Most organs increased in weight in proportion to the increase in core weight, but the liver and spleen increased proportionately more than the core, and the stomach, heart and kidneys increased proportionately less. At the end of suckling, sculp accounted for more than half of the body weight in both species. The subsequent 4-week fast resulted in weight loss from both the sculp and core, and the liver and spleen decreased in weight by about 70%. The net effect of sequential suckling and fasting was particularly striking in the hooded seal pup, which had a lighter core, heart, liver and spleen at 1 month postpartum than at birth. These data illustrate a remarkable cycle of nutrient deposition and depletion which is undoubtedly central to the survival of young seals in the harsh pack-ice environment.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Oftedal, Olav T.
Bowen, Don
Widdowson, Elsie M.
Boness, Daryl J.
spellingShingle Oftedal, Olav T.
Bowen, Don
Widdowson, Elsie M.
Boness, Daryl J.
Effects of Suckling and the Postsuckling Fast on Weights of the Body and Internal Organs of Harp and Hooded Seal Pups
author_facet Oftedal, Olav T.
Bowen, Don
Widdowson, Elsie M.
Boness, Daryl J.
author_sort Oftedal, Olav T.
title Effects of Suckling and the Postsuckling Fast on Weights of the Body and Internal Organs of Harp and Hooded Seal Pups
title_short Effects of Suckling and the Postsuckling Fast on Weights of the Body and Internal Organs of Harp and Hooded Seal Pups
title_full Effects of Suckling and the Postsuckling Fast on Weights of the Body and Internal Organs of Harp and Hooded Seal Pups
title_fullStr Effects of Suckling and the Postsuckling Fast on Weights of the Body and Internal Organs of Harp and Hooded Seal Pups
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Suckling and the Postsuckling Fast on Weights of the Body and Internal Organs of Harp and Hooded Seal Pups
title_sort effects of suckling and the postsuckling fast on weights of the body and internal organs of harp and hooded seal pups
publisher S. Karger AG
publishDate 1989
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000243136
https://www.karger.com/Article/Pdf/243136
genre Harp Seal
hooded seal
genre_facet Harp Seal
hooded seal
op_source Neonatology
volume 56, issue 5, page 283-300
ISSN 1661-7800 1661-7819
op_rights https://www.karger.com/Services/SiteLicenses
https://www.karger.com/Services/SiteLicenses
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1159/000243136
container_title Neonatology
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