Biologists on Wednesday reported they had discovered a new sensory
organ on blue, humpback, minke and fin whales that helps explain why
these mammals are so huge.
In a study appearing in the journal Nature, researchers in the United
States and Canada said the organ is located at the tip of the whale’s
chin, in a niche of fibrous tissue that connects the lower jaw bones.
Comprising a node of nerves, the organ orchestrates dramatic changes
in jaw position that are essential for “lunge” feeding by the rorqual
family of whales, Earth’s biggest vertebrates.
These whales plunge into banks of krill, gulping up tonnes of water
at one go and filtering it in seconds to get the tiny crustaceans needed
for food.
A 50-tonne fin whale, the second-longest whale on the planet, can
swoosh through 80 tonnes of water in one operation, netting 10 kilos (22
pounds) of krill in the process.
The lunge requires “hyper-expandable” throat pleats, a Y-shaped
cartilage structure connecting the chin and a lower jaw, made of two
separate bones that move independently.
“In terms of evolution, the innovation of this sensory organ has a
fundamental role in one of the most extreme feeding methods of aquatic
creatures,” said Bob Shadwick of the University of British Columbia in
Vancouver, Canada.
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