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Sense Organs. Chemoreceptors. Taste and smell sensory receptors Most primitive sense, all animals have it Important in finding food, locating a mate and detecting chemicals Location varies by animal Jacobsen’s organ - snakes. Taste. 4 primary types of taste Sweet, sour, salty, bitter,
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Chemoreceptors • Taste and smell sensory receptors • Most primitive sense, all animals have it • Important in finding food, locating a mate and detecting chemicals • Location varies by animal • Jacobsen’s organ - snakes
Taste • 4 primary types of taste • Sweet, sour, salty, bitter, • umami? Cheeses, broth, seafood, Asian foods • Microvilli of taste cell has receptor proteins for food molecules
Smell • 10 – 20 million olfactory cells!! (modified neurons) • Declines with age • Located on roof of nasal cavity • Olfactory bulb (extension of brain) has direct connection with limbic system (emotions and memory) • Smell and taste work together in cerebral cortex • Sometime molecules from smell travel to mouth and you taste it
Vision • Photoreceptors – sensitive to light • Some animals have “eye spots”, some have image forming eyes • Insects have color vision, shorter spectrum but includes ultraviolet light • Some fish, all reptiles, most birds • monkeys, apes and humans only mammals • Stereoscopic vision (binocular – in front) • Panoramic vision – eyes on side, prey
Human eye • 3 layers • Sclera – clear outer layer • Cornea – refracts light rays • Conjunctive – moistens • Pupil – light enters • Choroid – middle, includes blood vessels • iris – color of eye, regulates light entrance • Ciliary muscle – holds lens in place • Retina – inner layer, metallic • Rods –sensitive to light, black and white, night vision • Cones – color vision • Fovea centralis – acute vision
Eye • Lens • Refracts and focuses light, can be replaced • Aqueous humor • Water solution, anterior of eye, behind lens • Glaucoma – pressure builds up • Vitreous humor • Gel material in posterior of eye • Stabilizes the shape of eye, support retina • Optic nerve – sends info to brain • Blind spot – optic nerve exits the retina, no rods or cones
Disorders of eye • Presbyopia – old-sightedness • lens loses its ability to accommodate near objects • Nearsighted (myopia) • Elongated eyeball, image in focus in front of retina • Farsighted (hyperopia) • Shortened eyeball, image focused behind the retina • Astigmatism • Cornea or lens is uneven, image is fuzzy • Cataract – aging, exposure to sun, lens is milky and cannot transmit light rays
Hearing and balance – The Ear • Mechanoreceptors • sensitive to pressure, sound waves and gravity • Outer ear – pinna flap, auditory canal • Middle ear – tympanic membrane (ear drum) • Ossicles – stapes (stirrup), incus (anvil), malleus (hammer) • Eustachian tube – equalization of pressure • Inner ear – contains fluid • Semicircular canals, vestibule – equilibrium • Cochlea - hearing
Sound • Auditory canal tympanic membrane malleus incus stapes oval window endolymph in cochlea hair cells of cochlea synapse with nerve fibers of auditory nerve basilar membrane “organ of corti” nerve impulse travels to brain stem auditory area of cerebral cortex = sound!!
Sense of Balance • Semicircular canals – mechanoreceptors • Rotational equilibrium – head rotation • Gravitational equilibrium – straight line movement
Sensory receptors in animals • Lateral line – fish – • Detects water currents and pressure waves • Collection of hair cells with cilia • Statocysts – gravitational equilibrium • Cnidarians, molluscs, crustaceans • Give information only about the head