Do Dolphins Hear with Their Teeth? Shocking Study Reveals the Truth

Govind Tekale 

Scientists discovered dolphin teeth might serve as natural sonar antennae, expanding beyond their basic feeding function.

Photo Source: Naotake Murayama (CC BY 2.0)

Dolphin teeth feature greater mobility in extra-large sockets, supported by spongy bones unlike other mammals.

Photo Source: Pxhere (CC0 1.0)

Complex nerve bundles near dolphin teeth transmit signals faster than typical sensory receptors found in mammals.

Photo Source: Pxhere ( CC0 1.0)

Some dolphin species possess up to 240 teeth while Risso's dolphins maintain just 4 to 14 teeth in their lower jaw.

Photo Source: Pxhere (CC0 1.0)

Outer layer fibers around dolphin teeth penetrate into spongy bone tissue, creating a unique sensory network.

Photo Source: Pxhere (CC0 1.0)

UC Santa Cruz research revealed dolphins react strongly to military sonar at levels lower than previously estimated.

Photo Source: Daniel Torobekov (Pexels)

Dolphin groups showed behavioral responses including avoidance and group reconfigurations when exposed to sonar.

Photo Source: Noah Munivez (Pexels)

Military sonar systems commonly used in coastal regions like California pose serious threats to marine life.

Photo Source: Francesco Ungaro (Pexels)

Bottlenose dolphins pack between 80 to 100 teeth, equipped with specialized tissue structures for potential sound detection.

Photo Source: Joe Boyne (Pexels)