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The limbic system in Mammalian brain evolution.

R L Reep1, B L Finlay, R B Darlington

  • 1Department of Physiological Sciences and McKnight Brain Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32610, USA. reep@mbi.ufl.edu

Brain, Behavior and Evolution
|April 6, 2007
PubMed
Summary
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Mammalian brain scaling shows consistent patterns across diverse species. Marine mammals exhibit reduced olfactory and limbic systems, influencing brain structure volumes.

Area of Science:

  • Comparative neuroanatomy
  • Mammalian brain evolution
  • Allometry

Background:

  • Previous mammalian brain allometry studies focused on primates, insectivores, and bats.
  • Limited data exists for other diverse mammalian groups, hindering a comprehensive understanding of brain scaling.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate brain structure scaling in carnivores, ungulates, xenarthrans, and sirenians.
  • To compare these findings with existing data from primates, insectivores, and bats.
  • To identify conserved and variable patterns in mammalian brain allometry.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of brain structure scaling across selected mammalian taxa.
  • Comparative analysis with existing datasets from primates, insectivores, and bats.
  • Examination of olfactory bulb and limbic system volumes in relation to overall brain size.

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Main Results:

  • Fundamental patterns of brain scaling are conserved across all examined mammalian taxa.
  • Marine mammals with reduced olfactory bulbs also show reduced limbic systems, especially in olfactory-input regions.
  • An olfactory and non-olfactory limbic factor is present in all species studied.
  • An inverse relationship between isocortex and limbic volumes exists in primates, insectivores, ungulates, and marine mammals.
  • Terrestrial carnivores display high relative volumes of both isocortex and limbic systems, while bats show low relative volumes of both.

Conclusions:

  • Mammalian brain allometry exhibits fundamental similarities across diverse groups.
  • Olfactory input significantly influences limbic system size, particularly in marine mammals.
  • Developmental processes likely underlie the observed variations in brain structure scaling, such as the inverse relationship between isocortex and limbic volumes.