The olfactory system of sharks and rays in numbers

Author:

Aicardi S.1ORCID,Bozzo M.1ORCID,Guallart J.2ORCID,Garibaldi F.1ORCID,Lanteri L.1ORCID,Terzibasi E.3ORCID,Bagnoli S.4ORCID,Dionigi F.5ORCID,Steffensen J. F.6ORCID,Poulsen A. B.6,Domenici P.78ORCID,Candiani S.1ORCID,Amaroli A.1ORCID,Němec P.5ORCID,Ferrando S.19ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth, Environmental and Life Sciences (DISTAV) University of Genoa Genoa Italy

2. Independent Researcher Valencia Spain

3. Biology and Evolution of Marine Organisms Department (BEOM) Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn Naples Italy

4. Biology Laboratory (BIO@SNS) Scuola Normale Superiore Pisa Italy

5. Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science Charles University Prague Czech Republic

6. Marine Biological Section, Department of Biology University of Copenhagen Helsingør Denmark

7. CNR‐IBF Institute of Biophysiscs Pisa Italy

8. CNR‐IAS Institute for the Study of Anthropic Impact and Sustainability in the Marine Environment Oristano Italy

9. National Biodiversity Future Center (NBFC) Palermo Italy

Abstract

AbstractCartilaginous fishes have large and elaborate olfactory organs, but only a small repertoire of olfactory receptor genes. Here, we quantitatively analyze the olfactory system of 21 species of sharks and rays, assessing many features of the olfactory organ (OOR) (number of primary lamellae, branches of the secondary folds, sensory surface area, and density and number of sensory neurons) and the olfactory bulb (OB) (number of neurons and non‐neuronal cells), and estimate the ratio between the number of neurons in the two structures. We show that the number of lamellae in the OOR does not correlate with the sensory surface area, while the complexity of the lamellar shape does. The total number of olfactory receptor neurons ranges from 30.5 million to 4.3 billion and the total number of OB neurons from 1.5 to 90 million. The number of neurons in the olfactory epithelium is 16 to 158 times higher (median ratio is 46) than the number of neurons in the OB. These ratios considerably exceed those reported in mammals. High convergence from receptor neurons to neurons processing olfactory information, together with the remarkably small olfactory receptor repertoire, strongly suggests that the olfactory system of sharks and rays is well adapted to detect a limited number of odorants with high sensitivity.

Funder

Grantová Agentura České Republiky

Publisher

Wiley

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