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2007-11-17 01:49:27 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Dogs

5 answers

A dog's sensory organs are its eyes, ears, nose and tongue - and you know what they do!

Chalice

2007-11-17 03:14:37 · answer #1 · answered by Chalice 7 · 0 1

The sensory organs process sensory stimulation of various types. These include vision, hearing, smell, taste, various kinds of tactile or "touch" stimulation, temperature, pressure on joints, muscular contractions, etc. Think of all the bodily sensations you have, both externally and internally. All of those are generated by all the sensory systems, or senses, of the body. A dog has similar mechanisms, although some are more sensitive than ours, such as hearing and smell, and some of ours are better than theirs, such as vision.
Sensory systems allow an organism to respond to both external events (something you see, for example), and internal events ( your bladder is full, and you need to pee).

2007-11-17 03:26:53 · answer #2 · answered by drb 5 · 1 0

Same as humans - there are five: nose, ears, tongue, eyes, skin. As in humans all are dependent upon the ability of the brain to interpret stimuli.

2016-03-14 15:46:23 · answer #3 · answered by Claire 4 · 0 0

Do you mean like licking their nose so the Jacobson organ in their mouth can process what they smell??

2007-11-17 01:56:44 · answer #4 · answered by tom l 6 · 2 0

sense...

make sense?

2007-11-17 01:52:01 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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