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Platypus bills and some dolphin whisker pits both sense weak electric fields. What pattern is this?

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Answer: Convergent evolution

Universal mammal senseIf electroreception were a universal mammal sense, dogs, horses, and humans would be using it routinely, which they do not. The dolphin result is more interesting because it is not a simple shared inheritance. It shows that water can make an old or local structure worth repurposing into a new sensory job.

Convergent evolutionCorrect. Platypuses and electroreceptive dolphins are distant mammals, yet both can use passive electroreception in water. Some dolphins use transformed whisker pits, while platypuses use mucous-gland electroreceptors on the bill, so the anatomy differs. The shared pressure is the watery environment, where weak bioelectric fields can be useful at short range.

Sonar becoming touchSonar and touch are real dolphin themes, so this is a plausible mix-up, but electroreception is a separate channel. Dolphin clicks map objects acoustically, while the electric sense detects weak fields through sensory pits. The surprise is that a famous sonar animal also has a quiet, close-range electric sense.

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