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They have a special part of the body called the Jacobson's organ for smelling.
The Jacobson's organ, is part of the body that helps an animal smell things.
They utilize Jacobson's organ to track and find their prey.
The acute sense of smell uses both the trunk and Jacobson's organ.
Jacobson's organ and the remarkable nature of smell.
The Jacobson's organ of the title is a recently discovered organ halfway up the human nose.
In addition, the analysis of scents is carried out by Jacobson's organ in the palate.
Unlike many other animals, the horse's Jacobson's Organ doesn't open into the oral cavity.
Interspersed throughout "Jacobson's Organ" are dark statements about the minds of traditional scientists being closed to these wonders.
Physiologists call Jacobson's organ the vomeronasal organ, an unromantic name, not a hot title.
The snake will search actively for prey, often on the edges of water, using sight and sense of smell (using the Jacobson's organ).
Mice detect pheromones mainly with the vomeronasal organ (Jacobson's organ), located at the bottom of the nose.
They also have a snake-like head and appear to hold a Jacobson's organ, as they exhibit the "tongue-flicking" snakes use to "taste" their surroundings.
Mira opened her mouth, bared the Jacobson's organ in the roof of her mouth to "taste" the woman, then trilled with satisfaction.
The nasal epithelium, located on the inner surface of the nasal cavity and in the Jacobson's organ, is thicker than in other amphibians.
Using it's vomeronasal organ, also called Jacobson's organ, the snake can detect parvalbumins in the cutaneous mucus of its prey.
They smell by using their forked tongues to collect airborne particles, then passing them to the vomeronasal organ or Jacobson's organ in the mouth for examination.
The ram uses his vomeronasal organ (sometimes called the Jacobson's organ) for sensing the pheromones of ewes and detecting when they are in estrus.
Inside the skull, under the nostrils, there was a hollowing that probably was for the Jacobson's organ, an olfactory sensory organ sometimes referred as the "sixth sense".
The vomeronasal organ (VNO), or Jacobson's organ, is an auxiliary olfactory sense organ that is found in many animals.
They can sense olfactory stimuli both through their nostrils, and by flicking their tongue, which carries scent-bearing particles to the Jacobson's organ in the roof of their mouth.
For example, the snake uses its forked tongue to gather scent particles from the air and tastes them on a special membrane, called Jacobson's organ, at the back of its mouth.
JACOBSON'S ORGAN And the Remarkable Nature of Smell.