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The functional anatomy of elephant trunk whiskers

Authors :
Deiringer, Nora
Schneeweiß, Undine
Kaufmann, Lena Valentina
Eigen, Lennart
Speissegger, Celina
Gerhardt, Ben
Holtze, Susanne
Fritsch, Guido
Göritz, Frank
Becker, Rolf
Ochs, Andreas
Hildebrandt, Thomas Bernd
Brecht, Michael
Deiringer, Nora
Schneeweiß, Undine
Kaufmann, Lena Valentina
Eigen, Lennart
Speissegger, Celina
Gerhardt, Ben
Holtze, Susanne
Fritsch, Guido
Göritz, Frank
Becker, Rolf
Ochs, Andreas
Hildebrandt, Thomas Bernd
Brecht, Michael
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The article processing charge was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) – 491192747 and the Open Access Publication Fund of Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.<br />Behavior and innervation suggest a high tactile sensitivity of elephant trunks. To clarify the tactile trunk periphery we studied whiskers with the following findings. Whisker density is high at the trunk tip and African savanna elephants have more trunk tip whiskers than Asian elephants. Adult elephants show striking lateralized whisker abrasion caused by lateralized trunk behavior. Elephant whiskers are thick and show little tapering. Whisker follicles are large, lack a ring sinus and their organization varies across the trunk. Follicles are innervated by ~90 axons from multiple nerves. Because elephants don’t whisk, trunk movements determine whisker contacts. Whisker-arrays on the ventral trunk-ridge contact objects balanced on the ventral trunk. Trunk whiskers differ from the mobile, thin and tapered facial whiskers that sample peri-rostrum space symmetrically in many mammals. We suggest their distinctive features—being thick, non-tapered, lateralized and arranged in specific high-density arrays—evolved along with the manipulative capacities of the trunk.<br />Peer Reviewed

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1417744845
Document Type :
Electronic Resource