Manuscript Abstract
Catania, K.C. 1999. A nose that looks like a hand and acts like an eye:
the unusual mechanosensory system of the star-nosed mole. Journal of
Comparative Physiology A 185:367-372.
The star-nosed mole (Condylura cristata) has a snout surrounded by
22 fleshy and mobile appendages. This unusual structure
is not an olfactory organ, as might be assumed from its location, nor is
it used to manipulate objects as might be guessed from
its appearance. Rather, the star is devoted to the sense of touch, and for
this purpose the appendages are covered with
thousands of small mechanoreceptive Eimer's organs. Recent behavioral
studies fmd that the star acts much like a tactile eye,
having a small behavioral focus, or "fovea" at the center - used for
detailed explorations of objects of interest. The peripheral
and central nervous systems of the mole reflect these behavioral
specializations, such that the small behavioral focus on the
nose is more densely innervated in the periphery, and has a greatly
enlarged representation in the somatosensory cortex. This
somatosensory representation of the tactile fovea is not correlated with
anatomical parameters (innervation density) as found in
other species, but rather is highly correlated with patterns of behavior.
The many surprising parallels between the
somatosensory system of the mole, and the visual systems of other mammals,
suggest a convergent and perhaps common
organization for highly developed sensory systems.
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