It appears that those cool, moist dog noses have yet another talent!

Roxxsmom

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Ah, dog noses. Poking us behind our knees and making us squeak when we wear shorts. Shoved into the ground and surfacing caked in dirt. Poked into all manner of places we'd rather they not be, but still oh so adorable and the subject of dozens of internet memes. There have been countless studies on the amazing ability of dogs to detect and differentiate odors, but evidently dog noses also have the ability to pinpoint heat sources. Maybe it helps them (or their wild relatives) to locate prey when they move in close for the death bite?

Dogs’ noses just got a bit more amazing. Not only are they up to 100 million times more sensitive than ours, they can sense weak thermal radiation—the body heat of mammalian prey, a new study reveals. The find helps explain how canines with impaired sight, hearing, or smell can still hunt successfully...

...Most mammals have naked, smooth skin on the tips of their noses around the nostrils, an area called the rhinarium. But dogs’ rhinaria are moist, colder than the ambient temperature, and richly endowed with nerves—all of which suggests an ability to detect not just smell, but heat.

To test the idea, researchers at Lund University and Eötvös Loránd University trained three pet dogs to choose between a warm (31°C) and an ambient-temperature object, each placed 1.6 meters away. The dogs weren’t able to see or smell the difference between these objects. (Scientists could only detect the difference by touching the surfaces.) After training, the dogs were tested on their skill in double-blind experiments; all three successfully detected the objects emitting weak thermal radiation, the scientists reveal today in Scientific Reports.

Next, the researchers scanned the brains of 13 pet dogs of various breeds in a functional magnetic resonance imaging scanner while presenting the pooches with objects emitting neutral or weak thermal radiation. The left somatosensory cortex in dogs’ brains, which delivers inputs from the nose, was more responsive to the warm thermal stimulus than to the neutral one. The scientists identified a cluster of 14 voxels (3D pixels) in this region of the dogs’ left hemispheres, but didn’t find any such clusters in the right, and none in any part of the dogs’ brains in response to the neutral stimulus...

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/202...8560vkheVIM2gM4_B2TMBpj4wlrKZz6vRt15PYQzN6f04
 
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