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Snakes Hear Through Their Jaws

snakeventure

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Found this interesting....

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Snakes hear through their jaws

Tuesday, 4 March 2008 Eric Bland
Discovery News

Snakes pick up their prey's vibrations via their jaws, then send these patterns to their brains for processing

Scientists have shown for the first time how snakes can hear, despite their lack of external ears and internal eardrums.

The US and German research shows that snakes have two hearing systems, one via their jaws, providing valuable insight into snake evolution.

The work borrows techniques from nautical engineers and is reported in the journal Physical Review Letters.

"It's amazing how little we know about the biology of snakes," says co-author Bruce Young, a biology professor at Washburn University.

"It's nice to work in an area that is so under-explored."

For years it was assumed that snakes couldn't hear, that they sensed prey by smell, taste, and in some species, special heat-sensing pits near the nose.

Basic experiments during the 1970s showed snakes could hear, but didn't explain how.

Now we know.

With each tiny footstep, a mouse or other prey radiates waves through the ground and air the same way drops of water ripple through a pool and produce a single drip sound.

Just as a ship bobs up and down in response to a wave in the ocean, a snake jaw resting on the ground responds to sound waves carried by the ground.

"The lower jaw of a snake is essentially a ridged cylinder," says Young. "So in that respect it's not terribly different from a ship."

Bobbing up and down

The researchers used the exact equations that measure a ship's movement to model how a snake's jaw would move in response to waves moving through sand or earth.

Just as a ship can move in six different directions (heave, pitch, roll, etc) so can a snake's jaw (up, down, side to side, etc).

And just as a ship is more stable the deeper it rides in the water, snakes often bury themselves in sand to make their hearing more precise.

Buried, a snake can more easily detect the differences in the way its jaw moves.

Sent to the brain

After a sound is picked up by a snake's jawbones, it travels into the cochlea, where nerves pick up the signal and transmit it to the brain.

By hearing through their jaw bone and through a traditional ear, snakes essentially evolved a second way to hear, say the researchers.

Humans also have a very crude version of this ability. If you hit a tuning fork lightly and place it in the air next to your ear, the sound will be faint.

If you lightly hit the tuning fork again and then place the base against the bone behind your ear, the sound becomes much stronger.

While a human jaw is one complete bone, snakes have two jaws, an adaptation that allows them to swallow prey larger than themselves, but also apparently lets them hear in stereo.

Professor Catherine Carr, a biologist at the University of Maryland who was not involved in the research, says the work is "truly interesting".

"Transmission through the skull may have been how the first land vertebrates heard," she says.

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Link:
http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2008/03/04/2179359.htm?site=science&topic=latest
 
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