SAN DIEGO — Researchers from Stanford and UC San Diego have achieved a difficult breakthrough, making the first recordings of a blue whale’s beating heart while the animal swam in the wild along the California coast.
The achievement was reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The feat occurred in Monterey Bay, where Stanford scientists attached a small recording device to the animal.
“Four suction cups had secured the sensor-packed tag near the whale’s left flipper, where it recorded the animal’s heart rate through electrodes embedded in the center of the two suction feet,” Stanford said in a news release.
The sensor package later floated to the ocean’s surface, where the data was captured and reviewed by a team that included Paul Ponganis, a research physiologist at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography.