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Major evolutionary transitions, such as the shift of cetaceans from terrestrial to marine life, can put pressure on sensory systems to adapt to a new set of relevant stimuli. Relatively little is known about the role of smell in the evolution of mysticetes (baleen whales). While their toothed cousins, the odontocetes, lack the anatomical features to smell, it is less clear whether baleen whales have retained this sense, and if so, when the pressure on olfaction diverged in the cetacean evolutionary lineage. We examined eight genes encoding olfactory signal transduction pathway components and key chaperones for signs of inactivating mutations and selective pressures. All of the genes we examined were intact in all eight mysticete genomes examined, despite inactivating mutations in odontocete homologs in multiple genes. We also tested several models representing various hypotheses regarding the evolutionary history of olfaction in cetaceans. Our results support a model where olfactory ability is specifically reduced in the odontocete lineage following their split from stem cetaceans and serve to clarify the evolutionary history of olfaction in cetaceans.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00239-024-10217-5 | DOI Listing |
Evolution
May 2025
Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart, Germany.
Extant whales, dolphins, and porpoises result from a major macroevolutionary lifestyle transition that transformed land-dwelling cetaceans into fully aquatic species. This involved significant changes in sensory systems. The increase in brain size relative to body size (encephalization quotient) is an outstanding feature of modern cetaceans, especially toothed whales.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anat
May 2025
Incorporated Non-Profit Organization, Marine Wildlife Center of Japan, Abashiri, Japan.
The vomeronasal system receives pheromones and kairomones in mammals, and its receptor organ and primary integrative center comprise the vomeronasal organ (VNO) and accessory olfactory bulb (AOB), respectively. Because cetaceans, sirenians, and harbor seals no longer have a vomeronasal system, it might not be important to some marine mammals. On the other hand, an AOB has been confirmed in three species of the family Otariidae, although whether they also have a VNO has not been investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Processes
May 2025
Institute for Cell Biology, Heinrich Heine University, Düsseldorf, Germany. Electronic address:
Araújo-Wang et al. (2025) reported on aerial urination events in male Amazon river dolphins (Inia araguaiaensis) from the Tocantins River in Brazil, a phenomenon that appears to occur across populations of Inia. The authors argue that this behavior would be indicative of a yet undescribed sensory modality in these animals and that it probably represents an intrasexual display of dominance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mol Evol
December 2024
The New Zealand Institute for Plant & Food Research, Private Bag 92169, Auckland, 1142, New Zealand.
Major evolutionary transitions, such as the shift of cetaceans from terrestrial to marine life, can put pressure on sensory systems to adapt to a new set of relevant stimuli. Relatively little is known about the role of smell in the evolution of mysticetes (baleen whales). While their toothed cousins, the odontocetes, lack the anatomical features to smell, it is less clear whether baleen whales have retained this sense, and if so, when the pressure on olfaction diverged in the cetacean evolutionary lineage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relative importance of various sensory modalities can shift in response to evolutionary transitions, resulting in changes to underlying gene families encoding their reception systems. The rapid birth-and-death process underlying the evolution of the large olfactory receptor (OR) gene family has accelerated genomic-level change for the sense of smell in particular. The transition from the land to sea in marine mammals is an attractive model for understanding the influence of habitat shifts on sensory systems, with the retained OR repertoire of baleen whales contrasting with its loss in toothed whales.
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