Abstract

In night-migratory songbirds, neurobiological and behavioral evidence suggest the existence of a magnetic sense associated with the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal nerve (V1), possibly providing magnetic positional information. Curiously, neither the unequivocal existence, structural nature, nor the exact location of any sensory structure has been revealed to date. Here, we used neuronal tract tracing to map both the innervation fields in the upper beak and the detailed trigeminal brainstem terminations of the medial and lateral V1 subbranches in the night-migratory Eurasian Blackcap (Sylvia atricapilla). The medial V1 subbranch takes its course along the ventral part of the upper beak to innervate subepidermal layers and the mucosa of the nasal cavity, whereas the lateral V1 subbranch runs along dorsolateral levels until the nostrils to innervate mainly the skin of the upper beak. In the trigeminal brainstem, medial V1 terminals innervate both the dorsal part and the ventral, magnetically activated part of the principal sensory trigeminal brainstem nuclei (PrV). In contrast, the lateral V1 subbranch innervates only a small part of the ventral PrV. The spinal sensory trigeminal brainstem nuclei (SpV) receive topographically ordered projections. The medial V1 subbranch mainly innervates rostral and medial parts of SpV, whereas the lateral V1 subbranch mainly innervates the lateral and caudal parts of SpV. The present findings could provide valuable information for further analysis of the trigeminal magnetic sense of birds.

Highlights

  • In birds, the perception of somatosensory information from the facial/beak region is of central importance for a wide range of behaviors

  • The aim of the present study was to perform selective neuronal tract-tracing of the medial and lateral V1 subbranches in the long-distance night-migratory songbird Eurasian blackcap (Sylvia atricapilla) to map their respective courses from their distal nerve fiber terminals within the upper beak up to their projections in the trigeminal brainstem complex

  • We traced the entire V1 at a level where the medial and lateral V1 subbranch had already fused into one nerve (Figures 1A, 2A,E,I; black)

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Summary

Introduction

The perception of somatosensory information from the facial/beak region is of central importance for a wide range of behaviors. To mediate them, their underlying trigeminal sensory system has undergone a high degree of diversification. V. splits into an ascending and a descending trigeminal tract to terminate in the principal (PrV) and spinal (SpV) sensory trigeminal brainstem nuclei, respectively (Wild and Zeigler, 1996). PrV consists of an oval-shaped dorsal and a ventrally attached, crescentshaped part. These subparts relay trigeminal information to different parts of the forebrain (Wild et al, 1985; Wild and Farabaugh, 1996; Wild and Zeigler, 1996; Mouritsen et al, 2016; Kobylkov et al, 2020)

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