Being able to sit on the bottom for a decent length of time while burning minimal oxygen and energy can be a big help when chasing a whole bunch of different species.
I usually do it by grabbing onto a rock or a bit of weed.
But sometimes the weed just isn't strong enough to keep you down and there isn't a rock to grab on to (e.g. nothing but sand underneath you).
To stay down in such situations I'll breathe out a little to reduce my buoyancy.
I do however set my weight belt up so that even fully breathed out I'm still positively buoyant at the surface (just), so that should I ever black out underwater, I'll still float back to the surface and have a chance of survival (as long as I'm above about 9 metres - below this I start to go negatively buoyant, so when I'm diving deeper waters I'll take off a weight, but this setup covers me for most situations).
What I'm wondering is just how much does this release of air from the lungs reduce my maximum dive time?
Just how much does the air in the lungs contribute to your maximum dive time versus the oxygen already in your blood?
Had a bit of a google on this topic and turned up this thread (
http://www.thenakedscientists.com/HTML/ ... w/1000268/) - the impression I get from it is that the rate of oxygen being absorbed into the blood will increase a little with additional depth (i.e. additional pressure), but makes no mention of just how much oxygen is in the air in your lungs compared to how much is in your blood, or how much of the oxygen in that air is potentially available to you.
It does mention though that with decreasing depth (especially the last 10 meters), the reduction in pressure will actually pull oxygen
out of your bloodstream and put it back into the air in your lungs.
This sudden decrease in blood oxygen levels can cause you to blackout.
According to wiki (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_water_blackout) this kind of blackout (precipitated by depressurisation on ascent from depth) is called a deep-water blackout, and usally happens in the last 3 metres after having dived to a depth of 10 metres or more.
This is not to be confused with shallow-water blackout which is due to hyperventilating -> see here(
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shallow_water_blackout), although hyperventilation can often contribute to a deep-water black-out along with voluntary suppression of breathing.
Scary stuff eh? -> you can be on the bottom at sub 10 metres, feeling like you're good, start heading up again feeling like you've got plenty in reserve and will keep feeling that way all the way up until all of a sudden in the last 3 metres the oxygen suddenly jumps back into your lung air and boom - you're in the poo.
I wonder if there's a way around this? A way to protect yourself from this happening? -> what if, on the way back up, you exhaled most of the air in your lungs at the 4 metre mark? -> kinda hard for the oxygen to jump out of your blood and into lung air if there's no longer any air in there for it to jump into?
Okay, so you'd lose some buoyancy, but as you're already heading back to the surface from 10+ metres down, you've got probably some decent momentum towards the surface behind you. So if (like me) you're set up to be positively buoyant fully exhaled at the surface, even if you blackout in the last 3 metres (and even with no momentum towards the surface behind you), you'll still float up those last 3 metres. Is that right?
Hmmm..... but to get back to the original topic - does anyone here know how much the air in your lungs contributes to your maximum dive time?
Cheers.