Washington: Researchers possess  calculated super-sensitive crocodilian face nerve fibres to raised know how  this creatures, along with dinosaurs as well as crocodile species which resided  countless years back, connect to their own atmosphere.
 
 
  
  Crocodilians have nerves on their faces that are so sensitive; they can detect  a change in a pond when a single drop hits the water surface several feet away.  Alligators and crocodiles use these "invisible whiskers" to detect  prey when hunting. 
"The trigeminal nerve is  the nerve responsible for detection of sensations of the face," said Casey  Holliday, assistant professor of anatomy in the University of Missouri School  of Medicine. 
  
  "While we've known about these sensitive nerves in crocodiles, we've never  measured the size of the nerve bundle or ganglion in their skulls, until now.  When compared to humans, this trigeminal nerve in crocodiles is huge,"  Holliday said. 
  
  The key to this measurement is a specific hole in the skull. The trigeminal nerve  is rooted inside the skull but must travel through a large hole before it  branches out to reach the crocodile's skin on its face. 
  
  By examining how the skull size, brain size and ganglion size relate to each  other, scientists can estimate how sensitive the face is. Eventually, Holliday  hopes to measure this nerve in other ancient and contemporary species to learn  more about animal behaviour. 
"Currently, we rely on alligators, crocodiles and birds  to provide us with information about how ancient reptiles, such as pre-historic  crocodiles and dinosaurs, functioned," said Holliday who co-authored the  study with doctoral student Ian George. 
  
  "However, the first thing we have to do, is to understand how the living  animals function," Holliday said. 
  
  When comparing the size of the hole for the trigeminal nerve found in  alligators to that of certain dinosaurs, George said that the hole in the  much-larger dinosaur skull is very similar in size or even smaller, which could  give scientists more information about how well dinosaurs could detect small  sensations on the face. 
  
  From there, the scientists can start to trace the evolution of this nerve and  the mechanism used by crocodiles. 
  
  "Some species of ancient crocodiles lived on land and they probably  wouldn't have a use for a sensitive face that can detect disturbances in the  water," George said. 
  
  "So our next step is to trace back and determine when the nerve got bigger  and see how that might have parallelled the animals' ecology," George  said.
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