Lecture 20 Flashcards
1
Q
Types of Sense Organs:
A
- Chemoreceptors - smell, taste
- Photoreceptors - vision, light
- Mechanoreceptors - touch, hearing, lateral line, balance/position
2
Q
Chemoreception – Olfactory Organs:
A
- Ectodermal origin
- Olfactory epithelium located in the nasal pit or respiratory
- Olfactory hairs (dendrites) of olfactory receptor cells increase surface area and contain olfactory receptors that bind odorants/smells
- Activation of receptors sends electric signals to brain via olfactory nerve
- Olfaction is used for discrimination of chemicals (like odorants and pheramones) in the environment
3
Q
Chemoreception – Olfactory Organs (In Animals):
A
- Fishes: variable sense of smell but well-developed in some species; nasal pits with olfactory epithelium; barbels also smell
- Air-breathing Vertebrates: add mucous cells to dissolve the odorants and wash away old samples
- Tetrapods: size and complexity of nasal chamber increased
- Mammals: complex turbinate (scrolls of bone) increase surface area of olfactory epithelium; distinguish many scents
4
Q
Photoreception - General:
A
- Involve cells capable of phototransduction (ex. generate electrical signals with photon absorption
- Photoreceptor neurons are organized into the complex epithelium of the retina in the eyes
- Photoreceptor cells (rods and cones) detect light
- Converted to electrical signal and relayed to brain via optic nerve
- Brain translates the electrical signals into an image
5
Q
Eye Adaptation to Dim Light:
A
- Large eyes: large pupil, large lens close to retina
- Retina with few cone cells or none, slender rod cells closely packed together
- Tapetum lucidum, a reflective layers behind the retina, can be present
6
Q
Mechanoreception – the Lateral Line System in Aquatic Animals
A
- Present in all fish and larval (some adult) amphibians
- Consists of thousands of neuromasts dispersed on body surface or inside later line canal
- Neuromast contain hair cell mechanoreceptors
- Hair cells detect water movement by converting mechanical stimuli neural information
7
Q
Mechanoreception – the Inner Ear in Tetrapods
A) The Vestibular Organs and Equilibrium (4)
A
- The vestibular organs, ex. the semucircular canals and two chambers (saccule and utricle), detect position and motion of head and are important for balance
- Liquid movement in the semicircular canals causes deflection of hair cells mechanorecptors in ampullae
- Integration of signals from all ampullae permits precise determination of head movement in 3 dimensions
- Similar structure and function to lateral line system
8
Q
Mechanoreception – the Inner Ear in Tetrapods
B) The Cochlea and Hearing
A
- Tympanum (eardrum) receives airbone sound waves/vibrations
- Middle ear bones mechanically transmit the vibration to the oval window
- Motion of waves in cochlea fluid translates into shearing force over the hair cells mechanoreceptors
- Hearing sensitivity and selectivity depend on amplification in middle ear and differential responsiveness to sound frequencies along the length of tectorial membrane in inner ear
9
Q
Modifications of the Ear (fish, amphibians, reptiles, mammals)
A
- Fishes: inner ear only and no cochlea; saccule is primarily responsible for sound
- Amphibian: middle and inner ear; sound arrives to inner ear via two routes: tympanum-stapes (sound waves) and scapula-operculum (ground vibrations)
- Reptiles: some snakes have no middle ear; stapes joins the mandible or quadrate for reception of vibration from the substrate
- Mammals: complex middle ear, very long cochlea, external ear