Date: February 16, 2017
Source: University of British
Columbia
Fin whales use two neatly packed
levels of nested folds to protect the nerves along the floor of their mouth
during lunge feeding, according to new research from University of British
Columbia zoologists.
Large whales balloon an immense
pocket between their body wall and overlying blubber to store captured prey
during feeding dives -- extending nerves along their mouth and tongue to more
than double their length.
"But when they shorten again
these nerves have to fold so tightly that they develop bending stretches, which
could damage the nerve," says UBC zoologist Margo Lillie, author of the
paper in Current Biology. "It surprised me that just folding them up
created a problem."
The solution: the nerves use a
Russian doll-like structure to nest folds.
"The first level of waviness
allows the nerve to extend when feeding. Then the nerve structure is folded at
a second level of waviness at a smaller length scale -- that creates enough
slack in the shortened nerve tissue to allow it to go around each fold without
being damaged."
The whale nerves are so large
that Lillie and UBC colleagues Wayne Vogl, Kelsey Gil, John Gosline and Robert
Shadwick were able to use microCT to visualize the nerve's 3D structure.
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