AI Article Synopsis

  • Sea otters have advanced tactile abilities due to the neural organization of their paws and vibrissae (whiskers), but the study specifically investigates sensory receptors in their hairless skin.
  • The research finds Merkel cells and Pacinian corpuscles present in all tested areas (paws, rhinarium, lips, and flipper digits), with the highest concentration in the paws, indicating they function as a primary touch sensory area.
  • The study combines anatomical details with previous behavioral findings, highlighting how the physical structure of sea otters' skin contributes to their effective use of touch for various activities, including thermoregulation and prey capture.

Article Abstract

Sea otters (Enhydra lutris) demonstrate rapid, accurate tactile abilities using their paws and facial vibrissae. Anatomical investigations of neural organization in the vibrissal bed and somatosensory cortex coincide with measured sensitivity, but no studies describe sensory receptors in the paws or other regions of glabrous (i.e., hairless) skin. In this study, we use histology to assess the presence, density, and distribution of mechanoreceptors in the glabrous skin of sea otters: paws, rhinarium, lips, and flipper digits, and we use scanning electron microscopy to describe skin-surface texture and its potential effect on the transduction of mechanical stimuli. Our results confirm the presence of Merkel cells and Pacinian corpuscles, but not Meissner corpuscles, in all sea otter glabrous skin. The paws showed the highest density of Merkel cells and Pacinian corpuscles. Within the paw, relative densities of mechanoreceptor types were highest in the distal metacarpal pad and digits, which suggests that the distal paw is a tactile fovea for sea otters. In addition to the highest receptor density, the paw displayed the thickest epidermis. Rete ridges (epidermal projections into the dermis) and dermal papillae (dermal projections into the epidermis) were developed across all glabrous skin. These quantitative and qualitative descriptions of neural organization and physical features, combined with previous behavioral results, contribute to our understanding of how structure relates to function in the tactile modality. Our findings coincide with behavioral observations of sea otters, which use touch to maintain thermoregulatory integrity of their fur, explore objects, and capture visually cryptic prey.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ar.24739DOI Listing

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