Stanford researchers report first recording of a blue whale's heart rate (2019)
eatonphil
64 points
39 comments
March 13, 2026
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Discussion Highlights (7 comments)
PaulHoule
Note they put a Holter monitor on it https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1914273116 to get an ECG which is one of several strategies they could use. (e.g. lately I've been interested in Heart Rate Variability which has gotten me looking at reading heart rate with cameras, radars, pressure gauges, ultrasound, etc.)
navane
30 BPM at the surface, 4 bpm while diving.
krunck
A Whale's tachycardia is my bradycardia. Huh.
raldi
Anyone got a direct link to or time index of the recording? I skipped around the video on the linked page but it was all music.
arunc
> Looking at the big picture, the researchers think the whale’s heart is performing near its limits. This may help explain why no animal has ever been larger than a blue whale – because the energy needs of a larger body would outpace what the heart can sustain. Fascinating to learn such details!
trhway
and the highest heart rate belongs to the smallest mammal https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etruscan_shrew "The Etruscan shrew has a very fast heart beating rate, up to 1511 beats/min (25 beats/s) and a relatively large heart muscle mass, 1.2% of body weight." (to illustrate - machine guns typically do 600-900 rounds/min) I wonder whose muscle fiber is stronger per unit mass - the whale's or the shrew's...
general_reveal
It’s interesting Genesis talks of whales before many other things.