Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 0095-1606, USA.
J Anat. 2011 Mar;218(3):298-310. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7580.2010.01329.x. Epub 2011 Jan 4.
Inside the mammalian nose lies a labyrinth of bony plates covered in epithelium collectively known as turbinates. Respiratory turbinates lie anteriorly and aid in heat and water conservation, while more posterior olfactory turbinates function in olfaction. Previous observations on a few carnivorans revealed that aquatic species have relatively large, complex respiratory turbinates and greatly reduced olfactory turbinates compared with terrestrial species. Body heat is lost more quickly in water than air and increased respiratory surface area likely evolved to minimize heat loss. At the same time, olfactory surface area probably diminished due to a decreased reliance on olfaction when foraging under water. To explore how widespread these adaptations are, we documented scaling of respiratory and olfactory turbinate surface area with body size in a variety of terrestrial, freshwater, and marine carnivorans, including pinnipeds, mustelids, ursids, and procyonids. Surface areas were estimated from high-resolution CT scans of dry skulls, a novel approach that enabled a greater sampling of taxa than is practical with fresh heads. Total turbinate, respiratory, and olfactory surface areas correlate well with body size (r(2) ≥0.7), and are relatively smaller in larger species. Relative to body mass or skull length, aquatic species have significantly less olfactory surface area than terrestrial species. Furthermore, the ratio of olfactory to respiratory surface area is associated with habitat. Using phylogenetic comparative methods, we found strong support for convergence on 1:3 proportions in aquatic taxa and near the inverse in terrestrial taxa, indicating that aquatic mustelids and pinnipeds independently acquired similar proportions of olfactory to respiratory turbinates. Constraints on turbinate surface area in the nasal chamber may result in a trade-off between respiratory and olfactory function in aquatic mammals.
哺乳动物的鼻腔内有一个由骨板组成的迷宫,这些骨板被覆上皮组织,统称为鼻甲。呼吸性鼻甲位于前部,有助于热量和水分的保存,而更靠后的嗅觉鼻甲则在嗅觉中发挥作用。先前对少数食肉动物的观察表明,水生物种的呼吸性鼻甲相对较大且复杂,与陆生物种相比,嗅觉鼻甲大大减少。与空气相比,身体热量在水中更快地流失,增加呼吸表面积可能是为了最大限度地减少热量损失。与此同时,由于在水下觅食时对嗅觉的依赖减少,嗅觉表面积可能会减小。为了探索这些适应是多么普遍,我们记录了各种陆生、淡水和海洋食肉动物(包括鳍足类、鼬科、熊科和浣熊科)的呼吸和嗅觉鼻甲表面积与体型的比例。表面积是通过对干燥头骨的高分辨率 CT 扫描来估计的,这是一种新方法,可以比使用新鲜头骨更有效地对更多的分类群进行采样。总鼻甲、呼吸性鼻甲和嗅觉鼻甲表面积与体型密切相关(r²≥0.7),并且在较大的物种中相对较小。与陆生物种相比,水生物种的嗅觉表面积相对于体重或头骨长度明显较小。此外,嗅觉与呼吸表面积的比值与栖息地有关。使用系统发育比较方法,我们发现水生分类群中 1:3 的比例存在强烈的趋同支持,而陆生分类群中则接近相反,这表明水生鼬科和鳍足类动物独立获得了相似比例的嗅觉和呼吸性鼻甲。鼻腔内鼻甲表面积的限制可能导致水生哺乳动物的呼吸和嗅觉功能之间存在权衡。