2011
DOI: 10.1007/s13364-011-0041-1
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New ways to go—nasal floor structures as channelling system for vomeronasal stimuli in the shrew (Sorex araneus, Mammalia)

Abstract: The mammalian lateral nasal gland (LNG, also called Steno's gland) is known to be one source of so-called odorant-binding proteins, which are suggested to work as vehicles to carry chemosensory stimuli within the nasal cavity in order to guide them to olfactory and vomeronasal sensory neurons. Up to now, a largely unattended and unanswered question is how the secretions of the LNG migrate between the glandular opening at the upper edge of the anterior lateral nasal wall and the more caudally located vomeronasa… Show more

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(1 citation statement)
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“…The vestibule forms a dilation immediately anterior to the nasal chamber, being surrounded essentially by flexible cartilage, which in the dorsal and ventral regions differentiate in atrioturbinates (Nowack and Wöhrmann‐Repenning, ). The atrioburninate crosses the vestibule at a 45° angle to the sagittal plane.…”
Section: General Macroscopic Anatomymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The vestibule forms a dilation immediately anterior to the nasal chamber, being surrounded essentially by flexible cartilage, which in the dorsal and ventral regions differentiate in atrioturbinates (Nowack and Wöhrmann‐Repenning, ). The atrioburninate crosses the vestibule at a 45° angle to the sagittal plane.…”
Section: General Macroscopic Anatomymentioning
confidence: 99%