Seals use whiskers to track faraway fish
Saturday - Jun 12, 2010, 09:15pm (GMT+5.5)
Washington(ANI): A team of German scientists have found that harbour seals can track passing miniature submarines from 130 feet away by using their extraordinarily sensitive whiskers to follow the wakes the mini-subs leave behind in the water.
Previous studies with mini-subs and harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) revealed these agile hunters could prove remarkably perceptive.
However, since submarine propellers are not all that similar to fish fins, researchers wanted to see how sensitive the seals might be to more lifelike phenomena.
Scientists conducted underwater experiments at the Marine Science Center in Germany with a 6-year-old harbor seal named Henry over the course of two months.
As part of the research, they blindfolded the seal and trained him to poke his head into a plastic box shortly after they swept a small rubber fin through otherwise still water.
They also taught Henry to show which direction he thought the fin had moved by rewarding him with a tasty fish snack every time he was correct.
The researchers next had Henry swim into a pool shortly after a rubber fin had already swept through the water. Five seconds after a fin had swept through he could still successfully identify which direction the fin had moved with more than 90-percent accuracy.
As they gradually increased the length of the delay, meaning the wake was farther away by the time Henry reported his estimate, the scientists were amazed that even after a 35-second delay, Henry was able to tell them which direction the fin had passed with 70 percent accuracy. He only lost the trail after a 40-second delay.
Researcher Wolf Hanke, a sensory ecologist at Rostock University in Germany, said that a fish can cover tens and hundreds of yards (meters) in the span of a half-minute, so seal whiskers "compare well with the performance of whales and dolphins," and their sophisticated means of scanning the world with echolocation.
To find out more about the rubber fin's decaying trail, the scientists added microscopic polymer spheres to the water and filmed them as they swirled through laser light. They saw Henry twitched his head in the direction that the fin had moved within a half-second of the wake's plume touching his whiskers.
The researchers suspect that harbour seals can analyze the structure of the vortexes and jets kicked up by the plumes from the fin to find out which direction the fin moved.
"We knew that seals do not have echolocation, but still find fish in very dark and turbid waters. They turned out to be experts," Live Science quoted Hanke as saying.
The scientists detailed their findings online June 11 in the Journal of Experimental Biology.
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