“…Textures consist of the microscale tactile features on the surfaces of objects, and provide important cues for sensory mediated behaviors in mammals ( Diamond, 2010 ). Texture discrimination via the skin has been described for various tactile sensing arrays in mammals including the fingertips in humans ( Lamb, 1983 ; Morley et al, 1983 ) and non-human primates (squirrel monkey, Hille et al, 2001 ; rhesus macaques, Connor et al, 1990 ; Connor and Johnson, 1992 ; Hollins and Bensmaia, 2007), the trunk in elephants ( Dehnhardt et al, 1997 ), and the forepaws of rats ( Bourgeon et al, 2004 ) and sea otters ( Strobel et al, 2018 ). In the whisker system, texture discrimination has previously been described most extensively for rats and mice ( Carvell and Simons, 1990 ; Arabzadeh et al, 2005 ; von Heimendahl et al, 2007 ; Wolfe et al, 2008 ; Diamond, 2010 ; Jadhav and Feldman, 2010 ; Pacchiarini et al, 2017 ), and in a few aquatic mammals, namely sea otters ( Strobel et al, 2018 ), harbor seals ( Dehnhardt et al, 1998 ), sea lions ( Dehnhardt, 1994 ; Dehnhardt and Dücker, 1996 ) and manatees ( Bachteler and Dehnhardt, 1999 ; Bauer et al, 2012 ).…”