Harbour seals use their whiskers to detect tiny movements in the water Douglas Klug/Getty
Itâs a slasher film scenario playing out in nature. Harbour seals use their whiskers to follow underwater vibrations rippling away from gills of fish so they can home in on prey.
Until now we didnât know how seals manage to locate and catch bottom-dwelling fish that are hidden beneath the sand.
âWe have solved a longstanding riddle,â says Wolf Hanke, the biologist at the University of Rostock in Germany who led the study. âThese flatfish are very cryptic. They burrow in the ground and theyâre covered with sand or silt, but the seals still grab them.â
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The only way to avoid being eaten would be to stop breathing until the seal swims on â although itâs not clear if flatfish do this.
Wonderful whiskers
Flatfish constitute up to 70 per cent of the diet of harbour seals, so being able to detect the fish is key to the sealsâ success. After watching a hunting seal, with a camera attached to it, pinpointing flatfish with no visual giveaways to their position, Hanke and his colleagues set out to figure out how the seals do it.
To snap up the fish, seals use their whiskers to follow trails in the water.
âTo see a seal following an underwater wake is amazing,â says Colleen Reichmuth, a marine biologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. âItâs as if the animal is pulled by an invisible thread.â
The skill . Reichmuth was part of a team that developed a whisker array to mimic a sealâs ability to pinpoint underwater disturbances.
âIt has a variety of purposes, but the most obvious one is related to military defence, being able to detect and track moving objects underwater and being able to do it potentially quietly without using active sonar,â she says.
Blindfolded seals
We already knew that seals follow the ripples that swimming fish create in the water, but it was unclear whether seals could detect the slight motion from a stationary fishâs breathing over the ânoiseâ of ocean swells and the water movement caused by the sealâs own swimming.
Hanke and his team monitored three male seals â Luca, Henry and Filou â in a netted enclosure in the Baltic Sea that had been outfitted with eight nozzles that release waterĚýat an angle and rate that mimics the breathing patterns of flatfish.
The seals were blindfolded for half of the trials. When they were able to see, all the seals found the nozzle emitting water currents with at least a 90 per cent success rate. When blindfolded, they were all still able to identify the correct nozzle with at least 75 per cent success.
The researchers also covered the sealsâ faces and whiskers with a mask. In those trials, the animals didnât find any of the active waterĚýnozzles when searching, and mostly drifted on the waterâs surface.
Donât take a breath
Itâs like an underwater slasher film, in which the flatfishâs best bet is to hide out and hold its breath until the killer has gone. Hanke says it is possible for flatfish to hold their breath, but itâs not clear if they do it when seals approach.
âWhen partially immersed in sand on the ocean bottom, many flatfish leave their eyes sticking out, and with 360 degrees of vision they would very likely see a seal swimming towards them,â says Alex Schreiber, who studies flatfish at St Lawrence University in Canton, New York.
âHowever, unless they have evolved a âstop respiring in the presence of a predatorâ response,â he says, âthey may assume they are safely camouflaged and be unaware of the sealâs ability to detect their respiration.â
Schreiber says we canât assume either way. âIf the flatfish have not evolved this response, then the seals are successfully exploiting a flatfish weakness, and have an advantage.â
Journal of Experimental Biology
Read more: First video footage of seal drowning and eating a pup
CorrectionĚý[1/19, 8 pm]:ĚýA previous version of this story said that the nozzles emitted air, not water. This has been corrected.
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