The present study on unilaterally incompletely placodectomized chick embryos revealed that arrival of migrating LHRH neurons into the forebrain area is dependent on the presence of a central projection of the olfactory nerve. When a fragment of the lateral and medial olfactory epithelium was spared the damage, a small number of LHRH-ir cells were found to migrate into the forebrain along a thin NCAM-H-expressing fiber bundle of the olfactory nerve. In embryos with large lesions which destroyed the lateral olfactory epithelium, the poorly developed NCAM-H-positive olfactory nerve fibers were arrested where they meet the NCAM-positive medial nasal branch of the ophthalmic nerve and frequently fused with this branch fiber bundle. In these embryos, no LHRH-ir cells were detected in the forebrain area. They were deviated from their regular migratory course to the NCAM-H-positive medial nasal branch fiber bundle. This straying phenomenon indicates that some structural support is apparently needed for the migration of LHRH-ir cells, but their migratory route is not completely programmed in their precursor cells in the olfactory placode. In cultures of placodal tissues, the coexistence of migrating LHRH-ir cells with NCAM-H-expressing neural elements was always confirmed. It is suggested therefore that not only the structural support for the migration but also the interaction between LHRH-ir cells and NCAM-H-expressing neural elements is a prerequisite for successful LHRH neuronal migration.