In response to controlled, odor pulse stimulation of the olfactory receptor mucosa, large fluorescence signals were recorded simultaneously from 124 contiguous anatomical regions of the salamander olfactory bulb using the potentiometric probe RH 414. The amplitudes and waveforms of the signals varied systematically across the bulbar surface in apparent correspondence with the laminae of the bulbar neurons. Qualitatively similar results were obtained using both intact and decorporate preparations, although fluorescence signals obtained from intact animals were distorted by optical noise generated by mechanical disturbances related to the functioning cardiovascular system. These results indicate that multiple site optical recording can be used to obtain information about spatio-temporal patterning of bulbar electrical activity evoked by physiological odor stimulation of the receptor mucosa. This is the first demonstration that activity elicited by a single, one second odor stimulus at physiological concentration and duration can be measured across many elements in the olfactory bulb. Information provided by this approach, in combination with complementary data derived from 2-deoxyglucose and single unit studies, may yield a better understanding of how the vertebrate central nervous system extracts quality and concentration information from olfactory afferent input.