What senses do animals have?

          Most animals move around as they search for food, shelter or mates and avoid danger. So they have senses to detect what is going on around them. We have the same five main senses as many animals—sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch. Our main sense is sight. Compared to many animals, our eyes see clearly, in detail and in an especially wide range of colours. However, some animals have much better sight and other senses than we do. Some can even detect what we cannot, like tiny pulses of electricity.

          Some animals are nocturnal or active at night. They include cats, mice, bats, owls and moths. Their large eyes pick up as much of the faint light as possible. Animals that live in total darkness, like moles and cave salamanders or fish at the bottom of the sea have tiny eyes or none at all.

          The eye contains specialized nerve endings that detect patterns of light and send information about them to the brain. Other senses work in a similar way. In the ear, the eardrum is a thin piece of skin that vibrates when sounds hit it. Again, nerve endings detect these vibrations. Mammals, birds, lizards and frogs have eyes and ears on the head. However, some animals have them in other places on the body. A snail has eyes on flexible stalks. A clam has a row of small, simple eyes in the fleshy frill or mantle along the gaping edge of its shell. A grasshopper has eardrums on its knees.

 

 

SMELL AND TASTE

          Smell and taste are chemosenses. They are based on the presence of chemical substances, called odorants for smells and flavorants for tastes. We smell airborne odorants with the nose and taste flavorants in food and drink when they touch the tongue. Some animals have chemosensors on other parts of the body, too. A fly can taste with its mouthparts, its antennae (feelers) and its feet. A male moth’s feathery antennae can detect special floating chemicals given off by the female moth even if she is two or three kilometres away.

          A dog can smell scents up to 10,000 times weaker than we could detect.

          For animals in water, smell and taste are much the same. A shark has groups of chemosensors (taste buds) all around the inside of its mouth and also on the front of its snout. They are especially sensitive to blood and body fluids. A catfish has so many chemosensors in the skin all over its body that it is like a “living tongue”. Some fish including sharks, rays and elephant-snout fish (mormyrids) can detect the tiny electrical pulses given off by the active muscles of other animals. They use their electrosense to find prey in cloudy water or hiding in sand and mud.

 

 

     

 

         Electricity travels well in water, so many water animals have evolved to sense it. Electricity does not travel through air so land animals do not sense it. There are other senses that we lack and that we find difficult to imagine. Some animals migrate vast distances across featureless oceans with amazing accuracy. They may be able to sense Earth’s natural magnetic field or the way our planet’s downward pull of gravity varies slightly from place to place.

Picture Credit : Google