鸟类嗅觉:近期文献综述

Pub Date : 2020-01-01 DOI:10.3819/ccbr.2020.150005
V. Abankwah, D. Deeming, T. W. Pike
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引用次数: 0

摘要

鸟有嗅觉。尽管早期的假设认为鸟类很少或没有嗅觉(Audubon, 1826;希尔,1905;Stager, 1964),现在有大量证据表明它们具有功能性嗅觉所需的所有解剖学和神经生物学成分(Balthazart & Taziaux, 2009;Caro, Balthazart, & Bonadonna, 2015),从形态学上看,鸟类的嗅觉系统与两栖动物、爬行动物和哺乳动物的嗅觉系统非常相似(Kare & Mason, 1986;文策尔,1987)。大多数鸟类有成对的外鼻孔,通过它们呼吸空气,内鼻腔含有嗅觉上皮,功能性嗅觉受体,以及与前脑嗅球连接的神经元(Jones & Roper, 1997)。此外,研究还表明,它们会在觅食等多种任务中使用气味线索(例如,Healy & Guilford, 1990;Nevitt, Loosekoot, & Weimerskirch, 2008;Potier, Duriez, Celerier, Liegeois, & Bonadonna, 2019),识别蛋(Leclaire, Bourret, & Bonadonna, 2017),选择筑巢材料(例如Gwinner, 2013),避免捕食(例如Amo, Galvan, Tomás, & Sanz, 2008),以及在社会背景下,如物种(例如Krause等人,2014),亲属(例如Bonadonna和Sanz- aguilar, 2012;科芬,沃特斯,&马特奥,2011;Krause et al., 2012)和配偶识别(例如,Bonadonna & Nevitt, 2004)。然而,我们认为,即使在今天,研究人员也倾向于低估嗅觉在鸟类日常生活中可能发挥的作用。令人信服的证据表明,视觉和听觉(在较小程度上)是鸟类的主要感官(Martin, 2017)。相比之下,很少有鸟类的气味对人类来说是明显的(尽管也有明显的例外,比如冠毛小海雀;Hagelin, Jones, & Rasmussen, 2003),他们通常不参与任何明显的嗅觉行为,比如嗅。然而,这并不意味着嗅觉对它们的重要性有限。为了正确地看待鸟类的嗅觉,将其与人类进行比较是有用的。人类和鸟类一样,嗅觉通常被认为是最不敏锐的感觉;尽管如此,据估计,具有完整嗅觉系统的人类几乎可以检测(Amoore, 1977)和区分(Bushdid, Magnasco, Vosshall, & Keller, 2014)
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Avian olfaction: a review of the recent literature
Birds can smell. Despite early assumptions that birds had little or no sense of smell (Audubon, 1826; Hill, 1905; Stager, 1964), there is now abundant evidence that they are endowed with all the anatomical and neurobiological components necessary for a functional olfactory sense (Balthazart & Taziaux, 2009; Caro, Balthazart, & Bonadonna, 2015), and morphologically the olfactory systems of birds closely resembles those of amphibians, reptiles, and mammals (Kare & Mason, 1986; Wenzel, 1987). Most birds have paired external nares through which they breathe air, internal nasal cavities that contain olfactory epithelium, functional olfactory receptors, and a neuronal connection to the olfactory bulb in the forebrain (Jones & Roper, 1997). Moreover, they have been shown to use odor cues for tasks as diverse as foraging (e.g., Healy & Guilford, 1990; Nevitt, Loosekoot, & Weimerskirch, 2008; Potier, Duriez, Celerier, Liegeois, & Bonadonna, 2019), recognizing eggs (Leclaire, Bourret, & Bonadonna, 2017), selecting nest material (e.g., Gwinner, 2013), and avoiding predation (e.g., Amo, Galvan, Tomás, & Sanz, 2008), as well as in social contexts such as species (e.g., Krause et al., 2014), kin (e.g., Bonadonna & Sanz-Aguilar, 2012; Coffin, Watters, & Mateo, 2011; Krause et al., 2012), and mate recognition (e.g., Bonadonna & Nevitt, 2004). However, we argue that even today there is a tendency for researchers to underappreciate the possible role olfaction plays in birds’ everyday lives. Compelling evidence shows that vision and, to a lesser extent, hearing are the primary avian senses (Martin, 2017). By contrast, few bird species smell noticeably to humans (although there are notable exceptions, such as Crested auklets [Aethia cristatella]; Hagelin, Jones, & Rasmussen, 2003), and they do not typically engage in any overt olfactory behavior, such as sniffing. However, this should not be taken to mean that olfaction is of limited importance to them. To put birds’ sense of smell in perspective, it is useful to provide a comparison with humans. In humans, as in birds, olfaction is commonly considered to be the least acute sense; despite this, it has been estimated that humans with intact olfactory systems can detect (Amoore, 1977) and discriminate (Bushdid, Magnasco, Vosshall, & Keller, 2014) virtually
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