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 3 of 3)
Soares next covered several alligators’ snouts with the same plastic wrap, so that the bumps no longer came into contact with water or air, thus ensuring they had no way of detecting surface waves. She again dropped water into the tank. The alligators did not respond. Now she was ready to celebrate.
In a paper she published last year in the journal Nature, Soares wrote that the alligators’ bumps are "pressure receptors" that evolved millions of years ago and solved the problem of how a creature with armorlike skin could have tactile sensitivity. This sensory system is "a specialization of crocodilians that other animals don’t have," says Clark. It’s a "major breakthrough in crocodilian sensory physiology," says Valentine Lance of the Center for the Reproduction of Endangered Species in San Diego.
Soares still has questions she wants to answer. Alligators have bumps on their jaws and mouths, she points out, while other crocodilians have them all over their bodies. How come? "It’s a wonderful mystery. Their world is so different from ours."
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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