Nose guard.Bottlenose dolphins in Australia's Shark Bay like to accessorize ac·ces·sor·ize v. ac·ces·sor·ized, ac·ces·sor·iz·ing, ac·ces·sor·iz·es v.tr. To furnish with accessories: accessorized my outfit with a matching watch. v. : They sport sponges (a type of sea organism that lacks a backbone) over their snouts. Scientists have recently discovered how dolphins acquired this odd behavior. Why would Flipper wear a soft sponge on its rostrum rostrum /ros·trum/ (ros´trum) pl. ros´tra, rostrums [L.] a beak-shaped process. ros·trum n. pl. ros·trums or ros·tra A beaklike or snoutlike projection. ? "The sponge acts as a glove to protect their sensitive beaks," explains Michael Krutzen, a geneticist ge·net·i·cist n. A specialist in genetics. geneticist a specialist in genetics. geneticist at the University of Zurich History The University of Zurich was founded in 1833 with existing colleges of theology (founded by Huldrych Zwingli in 1525), law and medicine merged together with a new faculty of Philosophy. in Switzerland. That way, when the dolphin pokes around on the seafloor for fish, its snout is safe from the bottom's jagged rocks. Not all bottlenose dolphins use sponges in this way. So Krutzen and his colleagues wondered what led to the Shark Bay dolphins' behavior. To see if it was inherited, the researchers studied the dolphins' genes, or units of hereditary material. Result? It's unlikely that "sponging" dolphins carried a unique gene. Instead, Krutzen's team believes that the dolphins learn the skill from their moms. One piece of evidence: Scientists had observed that female dolphins born to sponge-sporting moms start donning a nosepiece nosepiece /nose·piece/ (noz´pes?) the portion of a microscope nearest to the stage, which bears the objective or objectives. nose·piece n. by the time they're 2 or 3 years old. But it turns out most males don't take up the behavior. Why not? Krutzen says that young males may be too busy trying to woo females to learn the skill from mom. |
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