a bear sniffing the air

Inside a bear’s snout lies an extraordinary world.

The ursine nose is lined with a vast sheet of specialized tissue, called the epithelium, which is embedded with scent-detecting nerves. Like the human epithelium, these cells have the exceptional ability to regenerate themselves (unlike most other nerves). But a bear’s epithelium dwarfs our own. « It is much, much larger than a human’s, » explained Heiko Jansen, a neuroscientist who researches human and animal physiology at Washington State University. « It’s several orders of magnitude larger. »

And lying above a bear’s great muzzle, scrunched under the brain, sits the olfactory bulb — a tube-shaped structure that connects a bear’s profusion of nose nerves to other parts of its brain. Jansen’s measured this brain structure. It’s about five times the size of a human’s.

Though research on bear olfaction is scant, the consequence of this highly-evolved scent architecture is indisputable.

« It’s obviously clear to everybody that bears have a great sense of smell, » said Jansen.

« I would characterize a bear’s sense of smell as complex and just as important to their lives as sight is to humans, » said Mike Fitz, a former park ranger at bear-filled Katmai National Park and Preserve and currently a resident naturalist for the wildlife livestreamers explore.org.

Bears’ dependence on extraordinary olfaction creates a reality that we can imagine, but never truly know. Their very existence might be swamped in potent odors.

« It’s a different world, » said Andrew Derocher, a polar bear biologist at the University of Alberta.

a very fat bear eating salmon in a river
Katmai National Park’s Bear 747 sniffing around his realm. Credit: NPS / B. MOSBROOK

What sort of world?

It’s a world in which you may be roaming through a river or Arctic plains by yourself, but you would have a firm awareness of the presence of other bears (or anyone else) around you, even if they’re nowhere to be seen. The presence of others wafts through the air.

« You’re never really alone, » said Derocher.

It’s a world in which information about other individuals is stored on the ground, trees, and grass, long after they’ve gone elsewhere.

« Sound and sight are ephemeral, » noted Fitz. « Scent lingers far longer. I could travel through an area and piece together stories of who was there prior to me without having to see or hear them. » 

Polar bears, for example, will cross a trail of bear prints and promptly sniff the frozen earth. In some cases, the male bears will turn around, perhaps sensing a dangerous or uninviting meeting with another bear. But if they perceive a potential female mate, « they’ll follow [the scent] like crazy, » said Derocher.

« You’re never really alone. »

Male brown bears have adopted a similar strategy. The bears obsessively pursue a female’s scent if they perceive she’s in heat. It becomes a drawn-out chase, often through dense forest. « The male can use his powerful sense of smell to follow her path almost exactly even when he can’t see her, » said Fitz.

It’s a world that would disturb or overwhelm us.

« If I were suddenly endowed with a superpower like a bear’s sense of smell, I think I might be shocked initially by the world of odor, » said Fitz.

Perhaps daily life for a bear is like perpetually walking around a piquant landfill, a fish market, or a New York City subway car in sweltering July. Or maybe it’s more like a perfumery.

It’s a world we’ll never quite understand.

« We find certain things revolting based on smell — other animals just find them irresistible, » said Jansen, noting animals that eat their own poop.

a bear in a river
Katmai National Park Bear 480 « Otis » and his big muzzle. Credit: nps / n. Boak

a bear's skull
Bear skull showing where olfactory neurons lead to the brain’s olfactory bulb. Credit: Heiko Jansen

Indeed, we don’t ever know what animals are truly thinking, what they understand, and how they view the world through their lively eyes and large nostrils.

« What would it be like to smell like a bear? » asked Jansen. « I don’t think we would ever truly know. »

But we do know that bears have olfaction powers perhaps many times stronger than bloodhounds. « [Bears] are probably more sensitive than a bloodhound to smelling different things, » Jansen noted.

Knowing just how powerful this olfaction is, though, is an open question.

« We know bears have an excellent sense of smell but there are few studies that quantify just how good it is, » explained Derocher.

That leaves room to wonder.

« You hear all sorts of stories, » mused Jansen, « like bears can smell a carcass from miles away. » « There’s probably some truth to that, » he added. « But there hasn’t been a lot of scientific research to back up those assertions. »

But one thing is certain. Bears rely on scent for survival. That’s because they must get fat. They only have a limited amount of time to amass fat reserves before the great, annual winter famine, also known as hibernation, begins.

« When it comes to bears it is survival of the fattest, » Derocher said emphatically.

« Their whole lives revolve around food, » said Jansen. « They have to get fat in the fall and hibernate. It’s no surprise that a lot of what they do is based upon their sense of smell. »

« It is survival of the fattest. »

Bears often stand erect in the wild, with their muzzles extended into the air to « see » what’s out there. The winds may carry hints of a meal in the distance, perhaps miles away. « Bears are working the winds all the time, » noted Derocher.

Without bears’ extraordinary ability to not just perceive scent — but understand a wealth of information stored in those scents like a thumb drive — the large omnivores (some well over 1,000 pounds) might not survive in the harsh, competitive wilds.

« If you’re a bear and you lost your sense of smell, I don’t think you would be a bear much longer, » said Derocher.

This story was originally published in October 2019.