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Olfactory flow in the sea catfish, Ariopsis felis (L.): Origin, regulation, and resampling. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The sea catfish, Ariopsis felis, has a specialized olfactory system located in its nasal chamber, designed to effectively capture water currents for better smell detection.
  • Researchers used advanced imaging and fluid dynamics to demonstrate how water flows through the nasal chamber and sensory structures when exposed to external currents, identifying common factors with other fish species.
  • The study revealed that a flexible nasal flap controls the flow of water, allowing the fish to optimize its olfactory sensing based on movement, especially at swimming speeds typical of the species.

Article Abstract

The olfactory epithelium of the sea catfish, Ariopsis felis, is found on a pinnate array of lamellae (the olfactory rosette) housed within a nasal chamber. The nasal anatomy of A. felis suggests an ability to capture external water currents. We prepared models from X-ray micro-computed tomography scans of two preserved specimens of A. felis. We then used dye visualisation and computational fluid dynamics to show that an external current induced a flow of water through a) the nasal chamber and b) the sensory channels of the olfactory rosette. The factors responsible for inducing flow through the nasal chamber are common to fishes from two other orders. The dye visualisation experiments, together with observations of sea catfishes in vivo, indicate that flow through the nasal chamber is regulated by a mobile nasal flap. The position of the nasal flap - elevated (significant flow) or depressed (reduced flow) - is controlled by the sea catfish's movements. Flow in the sensory channels of the olfactory rosette can pass through either a single channel or, via multiple pathways, up to four consecutive channels. Flow through consecutive sensory channels (olfactory resampling) is more extensive at lower Reynolds numbers (200 and 300, equivalent to swimming speeds of 0.5-1.0 total lengths s), coinciding with the mean swimming speed of the sea catfishes observed in vivo (0.6 total lengths s). Olfactory resampling may also occur, via a vortex, within single sensory channels. In conclusion, olfactory flow in the sea catfish is regulated and thoroughly sampled by novel mechanisms.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpa.2021.110933DOI Listing

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