Quantitative observations on the nasal epithelia and olfactory innervation in bats

Abstract
The nasal epithelia of two species of bats were quantified with respect to relative surface areas and olfactory epithelial volumes. In the macrosmatic Aribeus jamaicensis 55.9% of the nasal cavity surface was covered by olfactory epithelium (232.4 mm2), in contrast to only 28.9% in the microsmatic Myotis lucifugus (36.4 mm2). The roles of the various nasal epithelia have been discussed as they may relate to olfaction, respiration and echolocation. In the olfactory bulbs of both species, the estimated concentration of mitral cells approximated at 2,500/mm2 compared to an olfactory nerve concentration of 5/mm2. In Artibeus, calculated total volume of olfactory epithelium was on the order of 16 times greater than in Myotis, and Artibeus' olfactory bulb diameter was twice as great. These findings, together with previously published surface, volume and physiological relationships, suggest a developmental design mechanism for an olfactory bulb in which the number of olfactory receptors increases some 450-fold above an initially established ratio of 2:1 between receptors and mitral cells. Key governing factors could be requisite mechanical rigidity of the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone and response thresholds of higher brain centers.

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