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Abstract
The site and physiologic mechanism(s) responsible for the generation of odontocete
biosonar signals have eluded investigators for decades. To address these issues we
subjected postmortem toothed whale heads to interrogation using medical imaging techniques.
Most of the 40 specimens (from 19 species) were examined using x-ray computed tomography
(CT) and/or magnetic resonance imaging (MR). Interpretation of scan images was aided
by subsequent dissection of the specimens or, in one case, by cryosectioning. In all
specimens we described a similar tissue complex and identified it as the hypothetical
biosonar signal generator. This complex includes a small pair of fatty bursae embedded
in a pair of connective tissue lips, a cartilaginous blade, a stout ligament, and
an array of soft tissue air sacs. Comparing and contrasting the morphologic patterns
of nasal structures across species representing every extant odontocete superfamily
reveals probable homologous relationships, which suggests that all toothed whales
may be making their biosonar signals by a similar mechanism.