1 / 50

Animal Senses

Animal Senses. How do animals detect environmental stimuli?. Remember!. Sensory stimulation is the starting point of behaviour. Animal’s senses are not necessarily the same as ours. Photoreceptors. In animals light is detected by? The eyes

hinda
Download Presentation

Animal Senses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Animal Senses How do animals detect environmental stimuli?

  2. Remember! • Sensory stimulation is the starting point of behaviour. • Animal’s senses are not necessarily the same as ours.

  3. Photoreceptors • In animals light is detected by? • The eyes • The structure of the eye varies for different organisms.

  4. Structure of Eyes • Snails • Have simple eyes which detect light in the same way as we detect heat. • Insects and Crustaceans • Have compound eyes made up of many separate ommatidia. These give a mosaic vision, very good for detecting movement.

  5. Compound Eyes

  6. Structure of Eyes • Vertebrates • Have lenses that help to form clear images. • If two eyes face forwards they have overlapping fields (Binocular vision) enabling good judgement of distance

  7. Vertebrate Eyes

  8. Vertebrate Eyes

  9. Structure of Eyes • Night Vision • This involves a structure called the tapetum, this is a layer of silvery crystals that acts as a reflector allowing animals like cats to pick up 50% more light at night than human’s can detect. • This is why cat’s eyes glow in the dark.

  10. Night Vision

  11. Vision • Animals also use their vision to detect movement, speed of movement, shapes etc.

  12. Colour Vision • We, as humans see violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange and red parts of the light spectrum. • Bees see ultraviolet light but are less sensitive to red. This is why most red flowers have some blue or a strong scent.

  13. How bees see

  14. Colour Vision cont • Goldfish can see far red light. • Sea birds are particularly sensitive to red light.

  15. Sea Birds Vision

  16. Thermoreceptors • Infra-red light is a form of heat. • No animal can “see” infra-red with eyes, but certain animals can detect warm objects as if they can see them. • E.g. snakes

  17. Snakes Heat Sensors • Snakes have 2 heat sensing pits in front of and slightly below their eyes – these are so accurate the snakes can strike prey in pitch dark.

  18. Thermoreceptors • Humans can detect heat with their skin. • Other animals e.g. mosquitoes home in on their prey using thermoreceptors.

  19. Mechanoreceptors • These sense gravity, touch, pressure, stretch and movement. • These let the animal know which way is up. • They help recognition of the position of one part of the body in relation to another. This is important for coordinated movement.

  20. Mechanoreceptors Cont • Touch, pressure and the texture of objects in the environment, plus the tension in internal organs such as the stomach or bladder, are the functions of these receptors.

  21. Mechanoreceptors cont • The skin of humans has tactile receptors. • Sometimes animals have hairs with receptors at the base, like whiskers in cats

  22. Cat’s whiskers

  23. Mechanoreceptors cont • Some animals have special sense organs called statocysts that serve as gravity receptors.

  24. Mechanoreceptors cont • Fish have a lateral line organ that runs the length of the body. This consists of hairs with their tips enclosed in a jelly-like substance. These respond to waves, currents or disturbances in the water.

  25. Lateral Line

  26. Mechanoreceptors cont • Proprioreceptors are sense organs that respond to tension in the muscles or joints.

  27. Chemoreceptors • Olfaction (smell) • this is the detection of chemicals in the air or water that diffuse towards or are swept towards the animal • Used for the preliminary examination of things at a distance.

  28. Chemoreceptors • Gustation (taste) • the detection of chemicals in the liquid or solid state. • For the examination of objects that have been touched. • Four basic tastes: sweet, sour, salty and bitter

  29. Human Tongue

  30. Gustation Cont • These are located in different areas of the tongue.

  31. Chemoreceptors • The distinction between smell and taste becomes blurred in simpler animals. • Humans use their noses and tongues.

  32. Chemoreceptors • Flies have taste hairs on their feet. • Many insects smell using antennae.

  33. Chemoreceptors • Reptiles have a small opening in the head, this opens into the roof of the mouth. • This is called the Jacobson’s organ.

  34. Jacobson’s Organ

  35. Chemoreceptors • A snake flicking out its forked tongue is collecting chemical samples and bringing them back to the Jacobson’s organ for analysis.

  36. Pheromones • These are chemicals used to communicate between members of the same species. • Members of the same species have receptors to pick up these pheromones, other species ignore them.

  37. Auditory Receptors • In humans sound waves cause the eardrum to vibrate, these vibrations are transmitted across the middle ear by 3 small bones • This sets up vibrations in the fluid-filled cochlea. • This initiates impulses in the auditory nerve and we finally hear with our brain.

  38. Human Ear

  39. Auditory Receptors • Humans can hear from 20 Hz to 20 000 Hz. Sound above that is ultrasonic. • Bats use ultrasonic bleeps as a form of sonar. • Dogs and many insects hear in the ultrasonic range.

  40. Auditory Receptors • Whales use a complicated communication system involving ultrasonic sounds, echo-location and very low sounds called infrasounds (travel for long distances)

  41. Auditory Receptors • Elephants and Hippos use infrasound waves to communicate over long distances.

  42. Detection of Electric Fields. • Certain species “stun” their prey with an electric shock e.g. eels • Certain fish create an electric field around themselves, allowing them to pick up any disturbances in the field.

  43. Detection of Magnetic Fields. • Homing pigeons can detect the magnetic field lines of the earth, they use this to navigate during migration or homing.

  44. Questions • Name the colours of light we can see. • Which cells see colour and which see black and white? • Two eyes facing forward ………. Vision which is good for judging ………… • Insects have …….. Eyes made up of many ………. Which give …… vision. • Snakes can “see” ……… …….. With small pits set under their ……..

  45. Questions Cont • A gravity-detecting organ in invertebrates is called a ………… It consists of a round cavity with small …….., and placed on these is a small, hard, pebble-like object called a …….. • In fish the ……... …….. Organ detects disturbances in the water. • Name 5 ways that animals use chemicals.

  46. Questions Cont • Sounds above those that humans can hear are called …….., and those below are called………. • Some fish living in muddy conditions use ……… ………. to test the world around them.

More Related