Gator feelings: tough faces, more sensitive than ours. (Science News This Week).Alligators may not be the usual exemplar of delicate skin, but some of it is exquisitely sensitive. Gator faces carry pressure receptors so responsive that they can detect tipples on the water's surface from a single falling drop. That's more responsive than human skin, even lips. "Crocodilians have taken skin sensitivity to the next level," says Daphne Soares of the University of Maryland University of Maryland can refer to:
Alligators and crocodiles have dots on their skin that scientists have long suspected to be sense organs. In the May 16 Nature, Soares describes experiments that provide the first information about what the spots do. At first, Soares studied alligator alligator, large aquatic reptile of the genus Alligator, in the same order as the crocodile. There are two species—a large type found in the S United States and a small type found in E China. Alligators differ from crocodiles in several ways. tissue and noted that the dots connect to the trigeminal nerve trigeminal nerve n. The chief sensory nerve of the face and the motor nerve of the muscles of chewing. The nuclei of the nerve are in the mesencephalon and in the pons and extend down into the cervical portion of the spinal cord. , which is the thickest of the cranial nerves Cranial nerves The set of twelve nerves found on each side of the head and neck that control the sensory and muscle functions of a number of organs such as the eyes, nose, tongue face and throat. in an alligator. "It's about a quarter of the thickness of your pinky," says Soares. "If something is big, it's probably important to an animal." To see what information facial dots pick up, she monitored impulses from nerves attached to the dots of young alligators as she offered them various stimuli in a laboratory tank. "I tried electrical currents, I tried lights, I tried stinky things," she recalls. The nerves didn't respond. Then one day, when reaching into the water, she noticed the nerve firing. When she set a rod vibrating vibrating, v using quivering hand motions made across the client's body for therapeutic purposes. in the water, the nerve fired dramatically. In an experiment to test how the facial dots affect behavior, Soares placed young gators in a tank of shallow water so that they were half-submerged. To reduce input to other senses, she temporarily blocked the animals' ears with Vaseline and turned out the lights. Even so, whenever she dropped a milliliter milliliter /mil·li·li·ter/ (mL) (-le?ter) one thousandth (10-3) of a liter. mil·li·li·ter n. Abbr. of water into the tank, the gators turned toward the disturbance. "They'd usually go and bite it," says Soares. When completely underwater, however, the animals gave no response. In a further test, she blocked the facial receptors with a spreadable plastic used as the basis for some cosmetic beauty masks. The partially submerged gators no longer tracked the droplets. Seeking ancient signs of the sensors, Soares checked crocodilian fossils for holes in the jawbones where nerves passed through. She found such holes in semi-aquatic crocodilian fossils from as long ago as 200 million years. However, fossils of a terrestrial crocodilian and a fully aquatic one didn't have the holes. Because alligators are champs at hunting in the dark, James Perran Ross of the Florida Museum of Natural History The Florida Museum of Natural History is located at the University of Florida campus in Gainesville, Florida, USA. It displays exhibits on the flora, fauna, and people of Florida. The main museum is free of charge (but requests a donation). in Gainesville says that the sensitive receptors don't surprise him. He welcomes the work because "sensory capacities of crocodilians are not well understood." Valentine Lance of the Center for Reproduction of Endangered Species endangered species, any plant or animal species whose ability to survive and reproduce has been jeopardized by human activities. In 1999 the U.S. government, in accordance with the U.S. in San Diego calls Soares' work "a major breakthrough in crocodilian sensory physiology," adding that the "paper may open up a whole new area of research." |
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