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Chapter 9. Sensory Systems

a great white shark.
Figure 9.1. This shark uses its senses of sight, vibration (lateral-line system), and smell to hunt, but it also relies on its ability to sense the electric fields of prey, a sense not present in most land animals. (credit: modification of work by Hermanus Backpackers Hostel, South Africa)

Introduction

In more advanced animals, the senses are constantly at work, making the animal aware of stimuli—such as light, or sound, or the presence of a chemical substance in the external environment—and monitoring information about the organism’s internal environment. All bilaterally symmetric animals have a sensory system, and the development of any species’ sensory system has been driven by natural selection; thus, sensory systems differ among species according to the demands of their environments. The shark, unlike most fish predators, is electrosensitive—that is, sensitive to electrical fields produced by other animals in its environment. While it is helpful to this underwater predator, electrosensitivity is a sense not found in most land animals.

Attribution

This section is adapted from Chapter 17. Sensory Systems in Concepts of Biology – 1st Canadian Edition by Charles Molnar and Jane Gair which is licensed under a CC BY 4.0 License.

License

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Animal Physiology Copyright © 2025 by Avinash Singh is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.