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Acoustic communication and burrow acoustics are reflected in the ear morphology of the coruro (Spalacopus cyanus, Octodontidae), a social fossorial rodent

✍ Scribed by Sabine Begall; Hynek Burda


Book ID
102371060
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
240 KB
Volume
267
Category
Article
ISSN
0362-2525

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

We studied the middle and inner ears of seven adult coruros (Spalacopus cyanus), subterranean and social rodents from central Chile, using free‐hand dissection and routine staining techniques. Middle ear parameters that were focused on here (enlarged bullae and eardrums, ossicles of the “freely mobile type”) are believed to enhance hearing sensitivity at lower frequencies. The organ of Corti was of a common mammalian type and revealed three peaks of higher inner hair cell densities. Based on a position frequency map, frequencies were assigned to the respective peaks along the basilar membrane. The first peak at around 300–400 Hz is discussed with respect to the burrow acoustics, while the peak around 10–20 kHz is probably a plesiomorphic feature. The most pronounced peak at around 2 kHz reflects the frequency at which the main energy of vocal communication occurs. The morphology of the ear of the coruro corresponds to the typical pattern seen in subterranean rodents (low frequency and low‐sensitivity hearers), yet, at the same time, it also deviates from it in several functionally relevant features. J. Morphol. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.