Cover image for Vomeronasal Chemoreception in Vertebrates : A Study of the Second Nose.
Vomeronasal Chemoreception in Vertebrates : A Study of the Second Nose.
Title:
Vomeronasal Chemoreception in Vertebrates : A Study of the Second Nose.
Author:
Evans, Charles.
ISBN:
9781860949418
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (291 pages)
Contents:
CONTENTS -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENT -- FOREWORD -- ABBREVIATIONS -- INTRODUCTION -- 1 EVOLUTION -- 1.1 PHYLOGENY -- 1.2 DISTRIBUTION -- 1.3 REPTILES -- 1.4 MAMMALS -- 1.5 MONOSMIC STATUS -- 2 FUNCTIONAL MORPHOLOGY -- 2.1 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY -- 2.1.1 Lower Vertebrates -- 2.1.1.1 Fish -- 2.1.1.2 Amphibia -- 2.1.1.3 Reptiles -- 2.1.2 Mammals -- 2.1.2.1 The external nose and ducts -- 2.1.2.2 Non-sensory tissues -- 2.1.2.3 Neural structures -- 3 CHEMOSIGNALS -- 3.1 SEPARATION, IDENTIFICATION AND BIOASSAY -- 3.2 EXTERNAL TRANSMISSION -- 3.3 INTERNAL TRANSMISSION -- 4 DEVELOPMENT -- 4.1 PERIPHERAL, CENTRAL AND NON-SENSORY DEVELOPMENT -- 4.1.1 Peripheral Development -- 4.1.2 Central Development -- 4.1.3 Non-Sensory Development -- 4.2 CONTINUOUS AND DELAYED NEUROGENESIS -- 4.2.1 Delayed Neurogenesis -- 4.3 STIMULUS ACCESS -- 4.4 NEUROCRINE CELL MIGRATION -- 4.5 FUNCTIONAL MATURATION -- 4.6 GENERAL -- 5 PHYSIOLOGY -- 5.1 ACTIVATION OF THE AOS -- 5.1.1 Stimulus Access -- 5.1.2 Comparative -- 5.1.2.1 Fishes -- 5.1.2.2 Amphibia -- 5.1.2.3 Reptiles -- 5.2 DEAFFERENTATION (MAMMALS) -- 5.3 NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY -- 5.3.1 Chemoinvestigation -- 5.3.2 Photoperiod Effects -- 5.3.3 Sexual Dimorphisms -- 5.3.4 Sociosexual Effects -- 5.3.5 Populations -- 5.3.6 Central Effects -- 5.3.7 Vomeronasal Independence -- 5.3.8 Man -- 6 MOLECULAR BIOLOGY -- 6.1 INTRODUCTION -- 6.2 STRUCTURES -- 6.3 REGIONAL EXPRESSION -- 6.4 HUMAN VN GENES -- 6.5 CHROMOSOMAL DISTRIBUTION -- 6.6 CELLULAR EXPRESSION -- NOTE ADDED IN PROOF -- 7 BEHAVIOUR -- 7.1 CHEMOINVESTIGATION AND STIMULUS UPTAKE -- 7.1.1 Fish -- 7.1.2 Amphibia -- 7.1.3 Reptiles -- 7.1.4 Mammals -- 7.2 INTER-SPECIFIC INTERACTIONS -- 7.2.1 Predator/Prey -- 7.2.2 Sympatric -- 7.3 SOCIO-SEXUAL INTERACTIONS -- 7.3.1 Modal Interactions -- 7.3.2 Individual -- 7.3.3 Populations -- SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.
Abstract:
The Vomeronasal Organ is an olfactory structure in the nose, originally described in 1813 by the Danish court veterinarian Ludwig Jacobson. After some 150 years interest in it was reawakened, following the discovery of its key role in social and sexual responses. The organ serves to alert the emotional brain to the presence of specific semiochemicals, or signal molecules, which identify sex or status. Typically, such scents elicit responses at a non-conscious level - altering internal chemistry (hormones) in reaction to odours from the social environment (pheromones). The importance of vomerolfaction has recently been confirmed by findings on the genetic basis of smell. This book surveys the biology of the "Organ of Jacobson" from toads to tamarins. It provides an analysis of the neural pathway which processes pheromonal information delivered by the 'second nose' to the brain. Vomeronasal olfaction is examined in its evolutionary perspective, from molecular capture of scents to the consequent changes in reproductive activity. The treatment integrates structural and functional aspects with the system's development, and considers the implications of its unique genome. The student or researcher is lead up to the edge of contemporary thinking by an overview of vomerolfactory contributions to individual survival and to population dynamics. The issues raised by recent research are evaluated in relation to the properties of primary olfaction. Questions posed by the persistence of vomerolfaction as a distinct sense are explored for man and other higher primates. Contents: Evolution; Functional Morphology; Chemosignals; Development; Physiology; Molecular Biology; Behaviour. Readership: Final-year undergraduates in neurobiology or comparative physiology; advanced-course and PhD students in sensory physiology or evolutionary and behavioural biology;

researchers in chemosensory fields; professionals in the perfume/cosmetics industry.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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