• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

A Peek Inside Turtle Ears Has Turned Up Fresh Insights Into Vertebrate Evolution

October 11, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

A game of pin the ear on the reptile would likely highlight a gap in the average person’s knowledge surrounding turtle ears, but new research has taken a good look inside their noggins and found they’re surprisingly big. The apparatus in question is known as a bony labyrinth and as researchers on a new study recently found out, it’s comparatively larger than that of most mammals and more comparable to those of birds.

The vertebrate labyrinth gets its Bowie-esque name due to the role it plays in balance. It contains membranes that are able to detect changes in head rotation and acceleration, without which we’d be wobbling all over the place (one of the key symptoms of labyrinthitis, a type of inner ear infection that affects this structure, is dizziness and vertigo).

Advertisement

Historic research into the labyrinth has concluded that its shape and size is predicted by an animal’s environment and agility, but little research into this had been done outside of mammals. To challenge this, researchers on the new study looked at the labyrinths of modern and ancient turtles to see how the structure has changed across evolutionary history.

They investigated 163 specimens, 90 of which were extant species like softshell turtles, terrapins, and loggerhead sea turtles, and 53 of which were extinct. In life, the specimens studied would’ve represented a diverse range of lifestyles with talents such as burrowing, terrestrial locomotion, underwater locomotion, and swimming up their flippers.

turtle ears

Relative inner ear sizes of major vertebrate groups compared. Turtles, birds and lizards show large inner ear sizes compared to their heads, whereas mammals and crocodiles have small inner ears. Image credit: Serjoscha Evers

The analyses revealed that turtles have surprisingly large inner ears considering their modest head size, possibly indicating that big inner ears are an adaptation to an aquatic lifestyle and perhaps improve visual acuity. They also revealed that the bony labyrinths of turtles are larger than that of other vertebrates including mammals, being most similar in relative size to those of birds.

Advertisement

“We show that turtles have unexpectedly large labyrinths that evolved during the origin of aquatic habits,” concluded the authors. While historically, the labyrinth has been thought to be positively correlated in size with agility (an assumption built largely on mammalian research), few would put the leisurely flipper strokes of turtles in this category, demonstrating that what influences its size is something else entirely.

“We also find that labyrinth shape variation does not correlate with ecology in turtles, undermining the widespread expectation that reptilian labyrinth shapes convey behavioral signal, and demonstrating the importance of understudied groups, like turtles.”

This study was published in Nature Communications.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Tennis-Canadian teen Fernandez pulls off another upset to reach U.S. Open final
  2. Twitter accelerates again with Bitcoin tips, NFTs, recorded Spaces, creator fund and more
  3. Lamborghini Huracán STO: A final celebration before electrification
  4. Google to invest $1 billion in Africa over five years

Source Link: A Peek Inside Turtle Ears Has Turned Up Fresh Insights Into Vertebrate Evolution

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • If Birds Are Dinosaurs, Why Are None As Big As T. Rexes?
  • Psychologists Demonstrate Illusion That Could Be Screwing Up Our Perception Of Time
  • Why Are So Many Enormous Roman Shoes Being Discovered At Hadrian’s Wall?
  • Scientists Think They’ve Pinpointed Structural Differences In Psychopaths’ Brains
  • We’ve Found Our Third-Ever Interstellar Visitor, Orcas Filmed Kissing (With Tongues) In The Wild, And Much More This Week
  • The “Eyes Of Clavius” Will Be Visible On The Moon Today, Thanks To Clair-Obscur Effect
  • Shockingly High Microplastic Levels Found On Remote Mediterranean Coral Reef Island
  • Interstellar Object, Cheesy Nightmares, And Smooching Orcas
  • World’s Largest Martian Meteorite Up For Auction Could Reach Whopping $2-4 Million
  • Kimalu The Beluga Whale Undergoes Pioneering Surgery And Becomes First Beluga To Survive General Aesthetic
  • The 1986 Soviet Space Mission That’s Never Been Repeated: Mir To Salyut And Back Again
  • Grisly Incident In Yellowstone National Park Shows Just How Dangerous This Vibrant Wilderness Can Be
  • Out Of All Greenhouse Gas Emitters On Earth, One US Organization Takes The Biscuit
  • Overly Ambitious Adder Attempts To Eat Hare 10 Times Its Mass In Gnarly Video
  • How Fast Does A Spacecraft Need To Go To Escape The Solar System?
  • President Trump’s Cuts To USAID Could Result In A “Staggering” 14 Million Avoidable Deaths By 2030
  • Dzo: Hybrids Beasts That Are Perfectly Crafted For Life On Earth’s Highest Mountains
  • “Rarest Event Ever” Had A Half-Life 1 Trillion Times Longer Than The Age Of The Universe – How Did We See It?
  • Meet The Bille, A Self-Righting Tetrahedron That Nobody Was Sure Could Exist
  • Neurogenesis Confirmed: Adult Brains Really Do Make New Hippocampal Neurons
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version