Research Topic · Peer-Reviewed

Animal Antennae

Animal antennae are sensory organs found on the heads of many insects and some non-insect animals like crustaceans and worms. They are used to detect touch, smell, sound, and other environmental cues. Antennae are important for an animal’s navigation, communication, and protection. Antennae are often composed of bot…

📚 0 peer-reviewed articles cited 🔖 ISSN 2694-2275 🗓 Reviewed July 2026

Overview

Animal antennae are sensory organs found on the heads of many insects and some non-insect animals like crustaceans and worms. They are used to detect touch, smell, sound, and other environmental cues. Antennae are important for an animal’s navigation, communication, and protection. Antennae are often composed of both mechanoreceptors, which are sensitive to touch, and chemosensors, which are sensitive to chemicals. Some antennae also detect electric fields, such as those generated by other animals. Antennae play a critical role in the lives of numerous organisms, providing information and allowing them to respond to their environment.

Research published in this journal

No peer-reviewed research on this exact topic has been published in Zoological Research yet. Browse the journal →

Editorial oversight

Curated from peer-reviewed research published in Zoological Research (ISSN 2694-2275).

Journal editorial board
Alexander Ereskovsky · France ANDREI ALIMOV · Russia

This page summarises published research for orientation; it is not medical or professional advice.