Flared Nostrils:
When looking at a piranha head-on two projections looking like little satellite dishes with an opening on the side of it sit on the front of the err... "face". On closer inspection there is another opening at the rear of these "dishes". These are the nostrils, or nares, and that projection acts like a funnel to direct water into the forward opening.
The path of the water through the nares is observable in still water containing tiny particulate matter. Close inspection will reveal a flow is created which enters the front opening and leaves the rear one. Looking into the rear opening small reddish channels are visible looking like a labyrinth. They are heavily lined with blood and sense receptors. Within these are tiny cilia or hairs which beat and create the current so that when the fish is not moving the water still passes over the sense, or olfactory, organ.
Salmon, a fish requiring a strong sense of smell to home into it's river from the sea, doesn't even have this advanced set-up with large dishes directing water into the nares.
This allows the piranha to continually read it's environment. With a sense of smell reaching one part per billion, very little by the way of odor escapes their alertness.
It is known they can smell blood but any fluids leaving injured flesh is picked up. For that matter they can also smell healthy, uninjured fish much like a bloodhound can smell the individual odors of it's quarry. When feeder fish are placed in the tank, they all have their own distinct proteins and chemical signatures which can be picked up by these fish and the piranha know they are in the water even when they can't see them once they get the scent.
When looking at a piranha head-on two projections looking like little satellite dishes with an opening on the side of it sit on the front of the err... "face". On closer inspection there is another opening at the rear of these "dishes". These are the nostrils, or nares, and that projection acts like a funnel to direct water into the forward opening.
The path of the water through the nares is observable in still water containing tiny particulate matter. Close inspection will reveal a flow is created which enters the front opening and leaves the rear one. Looking into the rear opening small reddish channels are visible looking like a labyrinth. They are heavily lined with blood and sense receptors. Within these are tiny cilia or hairs which beat and create the current so that when the fish is not moving the water still passes over the sense, or olfactory, organ.
Salmon, a fish requiring a strong sense of smell to home into it's river from the sea, doesn't even have this advanced set-up with large dishes directing water into the nares.
This allows the piranha to continually read it's environment. With a sense of smell reaching one part per billion, very little by the way of odor escapes their alertness.
It is known they can smell blood but any fluids leaving injured flesh is picked up. For that matter they can also smell healthy, uninjured fish much like a bloodhound can smell the individual odors of it's quarry. When feeder fish are placed in the tank, they all have their own distinct proteins and chemical signatures which can be picked up by these fish and the piranha know they are in the water even when they can't see them once they get the scent.