Editor’s note: The following is the first installment of a four-part series summarizing fact sheets written by Wendy Powers entitled “The Power of Smell.”

Olfaction, the sense of smell, is the least understood of the five senses. This, among other factors, makes the task of reducing livestock odors a considerable challenge.

Odor terminology and perception
An odorant is a substance capable of eliciting an olfactory response, whereas odor is the sensation resulting from stimulation of the olfactory organs. Odors play an important part in our everyday life, from appetite stimulation to serving as warning signals for disease detection. A number of diseases have characteristic odors, including gangrene, diabetes, leukemia and schizophrenia. Odors have been implicated in depression and nausea as well.

Detectable odors can have a significant impact on people by affecting moods, as well as having physiological impacts on the olfactory system. People associate odors with past experiences and, from those experiences, involuntarily assess the odor as likable, dislikable or indifferent. Effects on individuals, however, vary from one person to another.

Odor threshold is a term used to identify the concentration at which animals respond 50 percent of the time to repeated presentations of an odorant. This term is reserved, primarily, for use in research with animals. Most often, however, odor threshold is used to mean detection threshold, which identifies the concentration at which 50 percent of a human panel can identify the presence of an odor or odorant without characterizing the stimulus.

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Detection threshold is the term most frequently used when discussing odor research results associated with livestock operations. The recognition threshold is the concentration at which 50 percent of the human panel can identify the odorant or odor, such as the smell of ammonia or peppermint.

Although the detection threshold concentrations of substances that evoke a smell are slight, a concentration only 10 to 50 times above the detection threshold value often is the maximum intensity that can be detected by humans. This, however, is in contrast to other sensory systems, where maximum intensities are many more multiples of threshold intensities. The maximum intensity of sight, for instance, is about 500,000 times that of the threshold intensity; and a factor of 1 trillion is observed for hearing. For this reason, smell often identifies the presence or absence of odor, rather than quantifies its intensity or concentration.

The ability to perceive an odor varies widely among individuals. More than a thousandfold difference between the least and the most sensitive individuals in acuity have been observed. Differences between individuals are, in part, attributable to age, smoking habits, gender, nasal allergies or head colds. Non-smokers over the age of 15 show greater acuity than smokers, in general. Furthermore, females tend to have a keener sense of smell than males.

Generally, the olfactory sensory nerves atrophy from the time of birth to the extent that only 82 percent of the acuity remains at the age of 20; 38 percent at the age of 60; and 28 percent at the age of 80. Consequently, olfactory acuity and like or dislike of an odor decrease with age.

Infants appear to like all classes of odorous materials, perhaps because they lack previous experience and because of their innate curiosity. Children younger than five years old rated sweat and feces as pleasant, but above that age they rated it as unpleasant. Like and dislike of a particular odor can change with odor concentration or intensity.

Generally, humans can distinguish between more than 5,000 odors, but some individuals experience anosmia (smell blindness) for one or more odors. In this situation, the individual apparently has a normal sense of smell, but is unable to detect one particular odor, regardless of its intensity. For example, because methyl mercaptan has an odor recognition threshold of only 0.0021 parts per million (ppm), it is often mixed with natural gas as an indicator of leaks; however, approximately one in 1,000 persons is unable to detect the strong odor of this mercaptan. An estimated 30 percent of the elderly have lost the ability to perceive the minute amount of this mercaptan used in natural gas.

Odor physiology
Olfaction depends upon the interaction between the odor stimulus and the olfactory epithelium. The olfactory membrane is a sensitive area, covering 4 to 6 square centimeters in each nostril (see Figure 1*). Beneath the membrane is a mucous layer. The nerve cells or peripheral receptor cells that primarily sense odors and fragrances are located in the epithelium. Cilia extend from the nerve cells into the mucous layer, which greatly increases the potential receptor area.

The cilia are thought to contain the ultimate olfactory receptors, which are specialized protein molecules. Specific anosmia may result from the inability to synthesize the appropriate protein. The receptor cells transmit impulses to the olfactory bulb located at the base of the front brain (see Figure 2*). At the bulb, fibers from the nose contact with other nerves, which travel on to various parts of the brain.

An estimated 100 million receptor cells are present in humans. For a substance to be detected as an odor by the receptor cells, several criteria must be met:

1. The substance must be volatile enough to permeate the air near the sensory area.
2. The substance must be at least slightly water-soluble to pass through the mucous layer and to the olfactory cells.
3. The substance must be lipid-soluble, because olfactory cilia are composed primarily of lipid material.
4. A minimum number of odorous particles must be in contact with the receptors for a minimum length of time.

Many theories have been proposed to describe the mechanism of smelling odors. Most can be classified into one of two groups: a physical theory or a chemical theory.

The physical theory proposes the shape of the odorant molecule determines which olfactory cells will be stimulated and, therefore, what kind of odor will be perceived. Each receptor cell has several different types of molecular receptor sites, and selection and proportion of the various sites differ from cell to cell.

The chemical theory, which is more widely accepted, assumes the odorant molecules bind chemically to protein receptors in the membranes of the olfactory cilia. The type of receptor in each olfactory cell determines the type of stimulant that will excite the cell. Binding to the receptor indirectly creates a receptor potential in the olfactory cell that generates impulses in the olfactory nerve fibers. Receptor sensitivity may explain some of the variation in detection thresholds exhibited by different compounds. For example, ammonia has an odor threshold of 0.037 ppm, whereas the corresponding values for hydrogen sulfide and sulfur dioxide are 0.00047 and 0.009 ppm, respectively.

Odor responses
Odor adaptation is the process by which one becomes accustomed to an odor. The adaptation time needed is greater when more than one odor is present. When adaptation occurs, the detection threshold increases. The detection threshold limits change faster when an odor of high, rather than low, intensity is presented. Besides, adaptation occurs differently for each odor.

Odor fatigue occurs when total adaptation to a particular odor has occurred through prolonged exposure. This situation would apply to milkers or dairy managers who are exposed to the smell of dairy manure on a daily basis – and appear virtually unaware of the odor.

While ammonia and hydrogen sulfide are odorants, and not odors per se, they are produced through processes often associated with odor, including municipal sewage treatment systems, coal burning, factories and livestock operations. Both ammonia and hydrogen sulfide can cause olfactory losses as a result of chronic or prolonged exposure. Ammonia can affect the central nervous system. A number of other chemical pollutants (including some insecticides) result in losses in olfaction by damaging olfactory receptors. The use of medications may exacerbate chemosensory disorders.

On average, olfactory receptors renew themselves every 30 days. Pollutants may alter this turnover rate or disrupt the integrity of the lipid membranes of olfactory receptors. Threshold levels have been identified for a number of pollutants, above which odor or irritation occur. Unfortunately, however, knowledge of the exact mechanisms by which pollutants alter olfaction is limited. ANM

References omitted due to space but are available upon request.

Figures omitted but are available upon request to editor@progressivedairy.com.

—From Iowa State University Extension website

Wendy Powers, Environmental Specialist, Department of Animal Science, Iowa State University