| Literature DB >> 29095949 |
Bruce M Rothschild1,2, Virginia Naples3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Two separate and distinctive skills are necessary to find prey: Detection of its presence and determination of its location. Surface microscopy of the dentary of albertosaurines revealed a previously undescribed sensory modification, as will be described here. While dentary "foramina" were previously thought to contain tactile sensory organs, the potential function of this theropod modification as a unique localizing system is explored in this study.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29095949 PMCID: PMC5667833 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0187064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Sensory organ modification.
| Sensation | Organ | Organism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sound detection | Vibrissae | Rat | [ |
| Pinniped | [ | ||
| Electroreceptors | Ampullae of Lorenzini | Sharks | [ |
| Magneto-detection | Olfactory | Fish | [ |
| Beak | Bird | [ | |
| Ocular | Bird | [ | |
| Pineal | Bird | [ | |
| Olfactory bulb | Bird | [ | |
| Infra-red radiation | Pits | Buprestid | [ |
| Labial scales | Pythons and boas | [ | |
| Thermal detection | Pits | Vipers | [ |
| Tentacles | Snake | [ | |
| Chemical detection | Strigolactone-sensor | Witchweed | [ |
| Oxygen detection | Neuro-epithelial cells | Mice | [ |
| Respiration detection | Acid-base | Japanese sea catfish | [ |
| Mechanoreceptors | Scale sensilla | Reptiles | [ |
| Fluid movement | Lateral line | Fish and amphibians | [ |
Phylogenetic dentary groove distribution examined in tyrannosaurids.
| Groove status | Genus | Collection number |
|---|---|---|
| Present | TMP 86.205.1 | |
| TMP 99.55.170 | ||
| TMP 82.28.1 | ||
| TMP 86.144.1 juvenile | ||
| TMP 86.49.29 | ||
| TMP 1983.36.134 | ||
| TMP 1992.36.749 | ||
| TMP 1991.036.0500 | ||
| BHI #126850 | ||
| TMP 1967.9.164 | ||
| TMP 2003.045.0076 | ||
| AMNH 5664 | ||
| Absent | TMP 1981.006.0001 | |
| LACM 238471 juvenile | ||
| AMNH 5027 | ||
| NMNH Peck rex | ||
| TMP 75.11.3 | ||
| TMP 2002.12.101 | ||
| TMP 2010.5.7 | ||
| TMP 87.48.4 | ||
| TMP 1981.003.0006 | ||
| TMP 94.143.01 | ||
| TMP 2001.036.0001 | ||
| ZCDM V0031 |
AMNH–American Museum of Natural History
BHI–Black Hills Institute. Specimen currently curated at Indianapolis Children’s Museum
LACM–Los Angeles County Museum
NMNH–National Museum of Natural History
TMP–Royal Tyrrell Museum
ZCDM—Zhucheng Dinosaur Museum
Fig 1En face view of lateral lines of Amia calva skull.
Multiple well-defined circular and irregular ellipse “pores” with expansile bases. Bar = 0.5 mm.
Fig 2En face view of lateral aspect of dentary of tyrannosaur Jane.
“Pores” are limited in distribution to a lateral mandibular groove, and do not bifurcate at the base. Bar = 2 mm.