Haptic Intelligence

The Scaling of Olfaction: Moths have Relatively More Olfactory Surface Area than Mammals

2022

Article

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Body size affects nearly every aspect of locomotion and sensing, but little is known of its influence on olfaction. One reason for this missing link is that olfaction differs fundamentally from vision and hearing in that molecules are advected by fluid before depositing on olfactory sensors. This critical role of fluid flow in olfaction leads to complexities and trade-offs. For example, a greater density of hairs and sensory neurons may lead to greater collection, but can also lead to reduced flow through hairs and additional weight and drag due to a larger olfactory organ. In this study, we report the surface area and sensory neuron density in olfactory organs of 95 species of moths and mammals. We find that approximately 12–14% of an olfactory system’s surface area is devoted to chemosensors. Furthermore, total olfactory surface area and olfactory sensing surface area scale with body mass to the 0.49 and 0.38 powers, respectively, indicating that moths have a higher proportion of olfactory surface area than mammals. The density of olfactory neurons appears to be near the limit, at 10,000 to 100,000 neurons per square mm across both insects and mammals. This study demonstrates the need for future work detailing how the scaling of olfaction and other senses vary across taxa.

Author(s): Nina Mohebbi and Andrew Schulz and Thomas Spencer and Kelsie Pos and Andrew Mandel and Jerome Casas and David Hu
Journal: Integrative and Comparitive Biology
Volume: 62
Number (issue): 1
Year: 2022
Month: July

Department(s): Haptic Intelligence
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
Paper Type: Journal

DOI: 10.1093/icb/icac006
Note: Nina Mohebbi and Andrew Schulz contributed equally.

BibTex

@article{Schulz22-ICB-Olfaction,
  title = {The Scaling of Olfaction: Moths have Relatively More Olfactory Surface Area than Mammals},
  author = {Mohebbi, Nina and Schulz, Andrew and Spencer, Thomas and Pos, Kelsie and Mandel, Andrew and Casas, Jerome and Hu, David},
  journal = {Integrative and Comparitive Biology},
  volume = {62},
  number = {1},
  month = jul,
  year = {2022},
  note = {Nina Mohebbi and Andrew Schulz contributed equally. },
  doi = {10.1093/icb/icac006},
  month_numeric = {7}
}