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Whale tooth mystery
The eight foot long tooth emerging from the head of the narwhal whale is
actually a type of sensor, researchers at the Harvard School of Dental
Medicine have found. The tooth has hydrodynamic sensor capabilities and can
detect changes in water temperature, pressure, and particle gradients.
These findings of Martin Nweeia and the Harvard School of Dental Medicine,
were reported recently at the 16th Biennial Conference on the Biology of
Marine Mammals in San Diego.
The questions of why the animal has the tooth and what is its function has
eluded the scientific community for hundreds of years. The tooth, or tusk,
emerges from the left side of the whale's upper jaw and is an evolutionary
mystery that defies many known principles of mammalian teeth. The tooth's
spiral, degree of its asymmetry to the left side, and odd distribution among
most males and some females are unique expressions of teeth in mammals, the
researchers explained. It has ten million tiny nerve connections that tunnel
their way from the central nerve of the narwhal tusk to its surface. Though
seemingly rigid and hard, the tusk has an extremely sensitive surface.
“Why would a tusk break the rules of normal development by expressing
millions of sensory pathways that connect its nervous system to the frigid
arctic environment?” asks Nweeia. “Such a finding is startling and indeed
surprised all of us who discovered it.” Nweeia collaborated on the project with Frederick Eichmiller, director of
the Paffenbarger Research Centre at the National Institute of Standards and
Technology, and James Mead, curator of marine mammals at the National Museum
of Natural History of the Smithsonian Institution.
The narwhal is typically 13-15 ft long and weighs between 2,200 and 3,500
lb. It lives in the Atlantic portion of the Arctic Ocean and in the
Greenland Sea. The whales use the tusk to detect particle gradients in, and
discern the salinity of, water—capabilities that could help them survive in
their Arctic ice environment. The tooth also helps them detect water
particles characteristic of the fish they eat. The sensory connections also
are capable of tactile ability. Researches noted that narwhals are known for
rubbing tusks, which likely causes them to experience “a unique sensation.”
Results of the findings are expected to have practical application to
restorative dental materials and help design new experiments for the study
of these mammals.
source: Control Engineering
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