Morphological peculiarities of a harbour seal (Phoca vitulina) whisker revealed by normal skeletonisation

Of all mammalian vibrissae, those of certain species of pinnipeds are exceptional. Researchers believe that their curious undulating form evolved for hydrodynamic detection. Our understanding of how these whiskers work depends on a geometrical model that captures the crucial pertinent features of th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Starostin, Eugene L, Dougill, Gary, Grant, Robyn A, Goss, Victor GA
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://e-space.mmu.ac.uk/629355/1/Morphological%20peculiarities%20of%20a%20harbour%20seal%20%28Phoca%20vitulina%29%20whisker%20revealed%20by%20normal%20skeletonisation.pdf
Description
Summary:Of all mammalian vibrissae, those of certain species of pinnipeds are exceptional. Researchers believe that their curious undulating form evolved for hydrodynamic detection. Our understanding of how these whiskers work depends on a geometrical model that captures the crucial pertinent features of the natural vibrissae including its tapering and curvature. It should also account for the form of the whisker when it flexes under external loading. We introduce and study a normal skeleton of a two-dimensional projection of a harbour seal whisker. The normal skeleton is a complete shape descriptor that involves reduction to the centreline equipped with a thickness function of the orthogonal cross-section. The contours of the whisker shape are extracted from a 2D greyscale scan. Our analysis reveals correspondence between the undulations of the width and oscillations of the centreline curvature as functions of arc length. We discuss two possible explanations for that remarkable feature: one based on consideration of growth and the other of plastic deformation. For the latter we employ a mechanical model to demonstrate appearance of curvature oscillations caused by extensive deflection of the undulating whisker due to external loading.