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December 15th, 2005, 16:54 GMT · By Tudor Raiciu

Why Does A Whale Need a Tooth Stuck to Its Head?

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Harvard School of Dental Medicine researcher Martin Nweeia has answered a marine science question that has eluded the scientific community for hundreds of years: why does the narwhal, or "unicorn", whale have an 8-foot-long tooth emerging from its head, and what is its function?

The narwhal has a tooth, or tusk, which emerges from the left side of the upper jaw and is an evolutionary mystery that defies many of the known principles of mammalian teeth. The tooth's unique spiral, the degree
of its asymmetry to the left side, and its odd distribution among most males and some females are all unique expressions of teeth in mammals.

The narwhal is usually 13 to 15 feet in length and weighs between 2,200 and 3,500 pounds. Its natural habitat is the Atlantic portion of the Arctic Ocean, concentrating in the Canadian High Arctic: Baffin Bay, Davis Strait, and northern Hudson Bay. It is also found in less numbers in the Greenland Sea, extending to Svalbard and Severnaya Zemlya off the coast of Russia.

Nweeia has discovered that the narwhal's tooth has hydrodynamic sensor capabilities. Ten million tiny nerve connections tunnel their way from the central nerve of the narwhal tusk to its outer surface.

Though seemingly rigid and hard, the tusk is like a membrane with an extremely sensitive surface, capable of detecting changes in water temperature, pressure, and particle gradients. Because these whales can detect particle gradients in water, they are capable of discerning the salinity of the water, which could help them survive in their Arctic ice environment.

It also allows the whales to detect water particles characteristic of the fish that constitute their diet. There is no comparison in nature and certainly none more unique in tooth form, expression and functional adaptation.

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