Paleontologists have discovered a prehistoric toothless dolphin that fed by vacuuming up squid:
There actually are modern odontocetes that don't really use their teeth either. Male beaked whales, for example, usually have one pair of teeth that is only used to fight for females, whose teeth stay completely hidden in their gums. Beaked whales, along with pilot whales and sperm whales, also catch squid by sucking them into their mouths. But all of these whales evolved recently. Inermorostrum xenops seems to have evolved its toothless suction-feeding independently and much, much earlier than modern suction-feeding whales. "It's a highly specialized species but it's essentially a dead end," says Boessenecker. Evolution, far from being some linear progression, often works this way, hitting dead ends and retrying failed experiments from millions of years earlier.
As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security stories in the news that I haven't covered.
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Source: Friday Squid Blogging: Prehistoric Dolphins that Ate Squid
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