| Literature DB >> 28827572 |
Christin T Murphy1,2, Colleen Reichmuth3, William C Eberhardt4, Benton H Calhoun5, David A Mann6.
Abstract
Although it is known that seals can use their whiskers (vibrissae) to extract relevant information from complex underwater flow fields, the underlying functioning of the system and the signals received by the sensors are poorly understood. Here we show that the vibrations of seal whiskers may provide information about hydrodynamic events and enable the sophisticated wake-tracking abilities of these animals. We developed a miniature accelerometer tag to study seal whisker movement in situ. We tested the ability of the tag to measure vibration in excised whiskers in a flume in response to laminar flow and disturbed flow. We then trained a seal to wear the tag and follow an underwater hydrodynamic trail to measure the whisker signals available to the seal. The results showed that whiskers vibrated at frequencies of 100-300 Hz, with a dynamic response. These measurements are the first to capture the incoming signals received by the vibrissae of a live seal and show that there are prominent signals at frequencies where the seal tactogram shows good sensitivity. Tapping into the mechanoreceptive interface between the animal and the environment may help to decipher the functional basis of this extraordinary hydrodynamic detection ability.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28827572 PMCID: PMC5566400 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-07676-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The accelerometer tag worn by a trained harbor seal. Photograph of the seal wearing the tag during live animal testing. The digital accelerometer is attached to a supraorbital whisker and connected by small wires to the datalogger, which is fitted to the animal’s head inside a pocket of the neoprene headband.
Figure 2Overlaid velocity magnitude spectra for a representative recording of an excised whisker with and without the accelerometer, tested in a flume tank. (a) Vibration in free-flow condition. (b) Vibration in disturbance condition. Matching shapes of the spectra are seen between the whisker with and without the tag. This indicates that the attachment of the accelerometer caused some attenuation of the signal amplitude but the vibration pattern was still faithfully recorded.
Figure 3Tag recordings obtained from a live seal in the test pool under different hydrodynamic conditions. Spectrograms (left column) of whisker vibrations and reassignment method time-frequency representations (right column) for accelerometer recordings from the whisker of an actively swimming seal. Recordings are shown for different hydrodynamic conditions: (a) Free-flow: Animal freely swimming, (b) Disturbance: Animal following a sphere, and (c) Disturbance: Animal following radio-controlled model submarine.