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Emu
Oil Research
Physiology
of the Emu
Emu Hair Cell Study
Hair
Cell Morphology And Innervation In The Basilar Papilla Of The Emu
(Dromaius Novaehollandiae)
FP
Fischer
Institut fur Zoologie
Technische Universit at Munchen
Garching, Germany
24 1998 Jul
The emu, being a member of the rather primitive bird group of the
palaeognathid Ratitae, may reveal primitives features of the avian
basilar papilla. There are, however, no qualitative differences with
the papillae of other birds such as the chicken or the starling. There
are only quantitative differences in the continuous morphological
gradients (such as hair cell height, stereovillar height) from neural
to abneural, and from the base to the apex of the papilla. Only few
(about two in the emu) afferent terminals and on average one efferent
fiber contact each hair cell. Along the abneural edge, there is a
population of hair cells that lack afferent innervation (short hair
cells), suggesting that their function must lie in the papilla itself.
There is thus a general pattern in the structures of the avian basilar
papilla. In detail, however, a number of primitive characters were
observed in the emu, as compared to advanced birds such as the starling
and the barn owl. The hair cells are very densely packed and comparatively
tall (up to 40 microm in the apex). This anatomy correlates well with
the good lower-frequency hearing (see K oppl and Manley, J. Acoust.
Soc. Am. 101 (1997) 1574 1584). The afferent nerve fibers contacting
the hair cells within the basilar papilla are rather thick, and there
are a large number of afferent fibers that contact more than one hair
cell. The zone of hair cells without afferent innervation (short hair
cells) along the abneural edge of the basilar papilla is rather narrow
in the emu.

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