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What Is the Use of Elephant Hair?

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, October 2012
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Title
What Is the Use of Elephant Hair?
Published in
PLOS ONE, October 2012
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0047018
Pubmed ID
Authors

Conor L. Myhrvold, Howard A. Stone, Elie Bou-Zeid

Abstract

The idea that low surface densities of hairs could be a heat loss mechanism is understood in engineering and has been postulated in some thermal studies of animals. However, its biological implications, both for thermoregulation as well as for the evolution of epidermal structures, have not yet been noted. Since early epidermal structures are poorly preserved in the fossil record, we study modern elephants to infer not only the heat transfer effect of present-day sparse hair, but also its potential evolutionary origins. Here we use a combination of theoretical and empirical approaches, and a range of hair densities determined from photographs, to test whether sparse hairs increase convective heat loss from elephant skin, thus serving an intentional evolutionary purpose. Our conclusion is that elephants are covered with hair that significantly enhances their thermoregulation ability by over 5% under all scenarios considered, and by up to 23% at low wind speeds where their thermoregulation needs are greatest. The broader biological significance of this finding suggests that maintaining a low-density hair cover can be evolutionary purposeful and beneficial, which is consistent with the fact that elephants have the greatest need for heat loss of any modern terrestrial animal because of their high body-volume to skin-surface ratio. Elephant hair is the first documented example in nature where increasing heat transfer due to a low hair density covering may be a desirable effect, and therefore raises the possibility of such a covering for similarly sized animals in the past. This elephant example dispels the widely-held assumption that in modern endotherms body hair functions exclusively as an insulator and could therefore be a first step to resolving the prior paradox of why hair was able to evolve in a world much warmer than our own.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United States 2 2%
Zimbabwe 1 <1%
South Africa 1 <1%
Botswana 1 <1%
China 1 <1%
United Kingdom 1 <1%
Unknown 107 94%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 25 22%
Researcher 24 21%
Other 11 10%
Student > Master 11 10%
Professor 10 9%
Other 24 21%
Unknown 9 8%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 39 34%
Environmental Science 14 12%
Engineering 12 11%
Earth and Planetary Sciences 8 7%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 6 5%
Other 21 18%
Unknown 14 12%