Mystery Bumps
Scientists knew that alligators' jaws are covered in bumps but it took biologist Daphne Soares to figure out why
- By David Berreby
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2003, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
"But I still didn’t know what these things did!" says Soares. Clearly the bumps were some kind of sensors that passed along information about the animal’s environment directly to the brain. And they appeared to be useful primarily to animals that spent their lives between land and water.
In 2001, Soares won a three-month Grass Foundation Fellowship to the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, a major center for neuroscience research. Until Soares arrived with 20 baby alligators in June, however, no one had used its sophisticated equipment on a crocodilian. At the lab, she taught herself to open the skull of a sedated but living animal and to insert an electrode into the area of the brain that receives electrical signals from the trigeminal nerve.
She hooked up the electrode to a bank of equipment capable of amplifying and recording brain activity in response to nerve stimulation. When nerve cells fired, loudspeakers sounded a series of rhythmic pops.
It took a month of experimenting before Soares could even begin to investigate what kinds of stimulation would make the nerve fire. She tested whether the bumps might be sensitive to light, or to electrical fields, like the skins of some eels and fish. She blew tiny particles of ground-up fish over the bumps to see if they were sensitive to taste or odor. But the loudspeakers stayed silent.
Then, one day, Soares reached into the tank and the speakers went brrraap.
After conducting further experiments, Soares concluded that the ripples in the water had caused the bumps to vibrate, which in turn caused the nerve to fire and send a message to the brain. This made sense for an animal that spends much of its life lying quietly in the shallows waiting for its prey to swim by or come to the water’s edge for a drink. And it also offered an explanation for why crocodilians that lived on dry land did not have bumps.
Still, Soares wasn’t ready to break out the champagne. "If someone pokes you in the eye, your optic nerve fires, but that doesn’t mean your eye is a poke-detector," she says. Was detecting ripples the bumps’ primary purpose? What if they served some other function that Soares didn’t know about? What if alligators found their prey, as do most animals, by sight and hearing?
Soares covered several alligators’ ears with fine plastic and placed them in a tank of water. In complete darkness, using an infrared camera to record the animals’ reactions, she let a single drop of water fall onto the surface. Though deprived of sight and hearing, all of the animals swam directly toward the spot where the drop hit the water.
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Comments (2)
Are there any pictures of these bumps or video clips relating to this article? Thanks!
Posted by Phan on November 8,2010 | 06:29 AM
I am 44 years old and I am breaking out on my four head and noise . And it is leaving dark spots, what can I do about it?
Posted by Angeleana Williams on June 29,2009 | 11:35 PM