Yopak Kara E, Lisney Thomas J, Collin Shaun P
School of Animal Biology and the UWA Oceans Institute, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA, 6009, Australia,
Brain Struct Funct. 2015 Mar;220(2):1127-43. doi: 10.1007/s00429-014-0705-0. Epub 2014 Jan 17.
Olfaction is a universal modality by which all animals sample chemical stimuli from their environment. In cartilaginous fishes, olfaction is critical for various survival tasks including localizing prey, avoiding predators, and chemosensory communication with conspecifics. Little is known, however, about interspecific variation in olfactory capability in these fishes, or whether the relative importance of olfaction in relation to other sensory systems varies with regard to ecological factors, such as habitat and lifestyle. In this study, we have addressed these questions by directly examining interspecific variation in the size of the olfactory bulbs (OB), the region of the brain that receives the primary sensory projections from the olfactory nerve, in 58 species of cartilaginous fishes. Relative OB size was compared among species occupying different ecological niches. Our results show that the OBs maintain a substantial level of allometric independence from the rest of the brain across cartilaginous fishes and that OB size is highly variable among species. These findings are supported by phylogenetic generalized least-squares models, which show that this variability is correlated with ecological niche, particularly habitat. The relatively largest OBs were found in pelagic-coastal/oceanic sharks, especially migratory species such as Carcharodon carcharias and Galeocerdo cuvier. Deep-sea species also possess large OBs, suggesting a greater reliance on olfaction in habitats where vision may be compromised. In contrast, the smallest OBs were found in the majority of reef-associated species, including sharks from the families Carcharhinidae and Hemiscyllidae and dasyatid batoids. These results suggest that there is great variability in the degree to which these fishes rely on olfactory cues. The OBs have been widely used as a neuroanatomical proxy for olfactory capability in vertebrates, and we speculate that differences in olfactory capabilities may be the result of functional rather than phylogenetic adaptations.
嗅觉是一种所有动物都具备的普遍感官方式,借此它们可以从周围环境中采集化学刺激信息。在软骨鱼类中,嗅觉对于各种生存任务都至关重要,包括定位猎物、躲避捕食者以及与同种个体进行化学感应交流。然而,对于这些鱼类嗅觉能力的种间差异,或者嗅觉相对于其他感觉系统的相对重要性是否会因生态因素(如栖息地和生活方式)而有所不同,我们却知之甚少。在本研究中,我们通过直接检查58种软骨鱼类嗅球(OB)的大小来解决这些问题,嗅球是大脑中接收来自嗅神经的初级感觉投射的区域。我们比较了占据不同生态位的物种之间的相对嗅球大小。我们的结果表明,在软骨鱼类中,嗅球与大脑其他部分保持着相当程度的异速生长独立性,并且嗅球大小在物种间高度可变。系统发育广义最小二乘法模型支持了这些发现,该模型表明这种变异性与生态位相关,特别是与栖息地有关。相对最大的嗅球见于远洋 - 沿海/海洋鲨鱼,尤其是诸如大白鲨和虎鲨等洄游物种。深海物种也拥有较大的嗅球,这表明在视觉可能受到影响的栖息地中,它们对嗅觉的依赖程度更高。相比之下,大多数与珊瑚礁相关的物种,包括真鲨科和半环扁鲨科的鲨鱼以及鲼形目鲼科鱼类,其嗅球最小。这些结果表明,这些鱼类对嗅觉线索的依赖程度存在很大差异。嗅球已被广泛用作脊椎动物嗅觉能力的神经解剖学指标,我们推测嗅觉能力的差异可能是功能适应而非系统发育适应的结果。