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8 animals that lack visible ears, but can still hear in unique ways

ETimes.in | Last updated on - Nov 20, 2025, 15:05 IST
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8 animals that lack visible ears, but can still hear in unique ways

Some animals appear earless at first glance, but their hearing abilities are surprisingly sharp. Instead of visible external ears, they rely on hidden ear openings, internal structures, or specialised skin adaptations to pick up sound. These unique mechanisms help them survive, hunt, communicate, and stay alert in their natural environments. Here are eight fascinating creatures that hear exceptionally well despite seeming earless.

2/9

Frogs

Most frogs appear earless, but they have tympanum discs - flat circular membranes on the sides of their heads - that function as ears. These discs pick up sound waves from air and water, helping frogs detect calls from mates and potential threats. Their hearing is finely tuned for communication during breeding seasons.

3/9

Turtles

Turtles have no visible ears, but they possess internal ear structures beneath their skin. They primarily detect low-frequency sounds and vibrations, especially underwater. This unique hearing ability helps them navigate, sense predators, and communicate subtly, particularly in aquatic environments where sound travels efficiently.

4/9

Seals

Seals often look earless because their ear openings are tiny slits that close underwater. Despite this, they have outstanding hearing both in air and below water. Their sensitive ear canals allow them to track movements and detect distant sounds, crucial for hunting fish and avoiding predators like sharks and orcas.

5/9

Moles

Moles live underground and have skin-covered ear openings, making their ears invisible. They depend heavily on vibration detection rather than airborne sound. This adaptation helps them sense insects moving through soil, detect environmental shifts, and remain alert to predators above ground.

6/9

Owls

Some owl species appear earless because their “ear tufts” are just feathers, not actual ears. Their real ears are asymmetrically placed openings hidden under feathers. This unusual placement helps them pinpoint prey with extraordinary accuracy - even in complete darkness - by triangulating sound direction.

7/9

Crocodiles

Crocodiles have ear openings hidden behind flaps of skin. These flaps seal tightly during swimming, protecting their ears underwater. On land, crocodiles possess acute hearing and can detect even faint noises. Their hearing helps them communicate using low-frequency sounds and monitor their surroundings while remaining still.

8/9

Salamanders

Salamanders lack external ears entirely, yet they detect sound through their skin and skull bones. They sense vibrations from the ground or water, which helps them locate prey like insects and stay alert to approaching predators. Their subtle hearing mechanism is perfectly suited for their moist, low-light habitats.

9/9

Snakes

Snakes lack external ears, yet they possess internal ear bones that detect ground vibrations and low-frequency sounds. Their jawbone conducts vibrations to the inner ear, allowing them to sense approaching prey or predators. Though they cannot hear airborne sounds the way humans do, their vibration sensitivity gives them remarkable environmental awareness.

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