ear
Sense organ in vertebrates that is specialized for the detection of sound, and the maintenance of balance. Includes the outer ear and middle ear, which collect and transmit sound waves; and the inner ear, which contains the organs of balance and (except in fish) hearing. Also includes the pinna, the visible part of the outer ear, present in some mammals. [ http://amigo.geneontology.org/amigo/term/GO:0042471 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ear ]
Term info
- Wikipedia:Ear
- EHDAA:502
- GAID:62
- AAO:0011014
- SCTID:1910005
- MIAA:0000138
- EV:0100353
- MAT:0000138
- EMAPA:16193
- galen:Ear
- FMA:52780
- BIRNLEX:1062
- BTO:0000368
- UMLS:C0013443 (ncithesaurus:Ear)
- EFO:0000826
- MESH:D004423
- CALOHA:TS-1165
- VHOG:0000330
- EHDAA2:0000423
- UMLS:C0521421 (BIRNLEX:1062)
- NCIT:C12394
- UMLS:C0013443 (BIRNLEX:1062)
- MA:0000236
- XAO:0000189
uberon_slim, efo_slim, pheno_slim, organ_slim
The organ of hearing and of equilibrium. [TFD][VHOG]
Both vertebrate and invertebrate auditory organs are thought to have evolved from primitive mechanosensors, but the nature of the ancestral structure and the evolutionary trajectories followed in distinct animal lineages remain unknown. In particular, we do not know how many types of mechanosensor existed in the protostome-deuterostome ancestor from which insects and vertebrates evolved or whether the PDA had an auditory organ.[well established][VHOG]
auricular
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b8/Ear.jpg
auris, auditory apparatus
uberon
UBERON:0001690
Ear