Correspondence between evoked vocal responses and auditory thresholds in Pleurodema thaul (Amphibia; Leptodactylidae)
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2008-04Metadata
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Penna Varela, Mario
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Correspondence between evoked vocal responses and auditory thresholds in Pleurodema thaul (Amphibia; Leptodactylidae)
Abstract
Thresholds for evoked vocal responses and
thresholds of multiunit midbrain auditory responses to pure
tones and synthetic calls were investigated in males of
Pleurodema thaul, as behavioral thresholds well above
auditory sensitivity have been reported for other anurans.
Thresholds for evoked vocal responses to synthetic advertisement
calls played back at increasing intensity averaged
43 dB RMS SPL (range 31–52 dB RMS SPL), measured at
the subjects’ position. Number of pulses increased with
stimulus intensities, reaching a plateau at about 18–39 dB
above threshold and decreased at higher intensities.
Latency to call followed inverse trends relative to number
of pulses. Neural audiograms yielded an average best
threshold in the high frequency range of 46.6 dB RMS SPL
(range 41–51 dB RMS SPL) and a center frequency of
1.9 kHz (range 1.7–2.6 kHz). Auditory thresholds for a
synthetic call having a carrier frequency of 2.1 kHz averaged
44 dB RMS SPL (range 39–47 dB RMS SPL). The
similarity between thresholds for advertisement calling and
auditory thresholds for the advertisement call indicates that
male P. thaul use the full extent of their auditory sensitivity
in acoustic interactions, likely an evolutionary adaptation
allowing chorusing activity in low-density aggregations.
Patrocinador
This study was supported by FONDECYT
grant 1040830 to Mario Penna. Nelson Velásquez conducted the
electrophysiological recordings under the award of CONICYT
fellowship D-21060849.
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JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY A-NEUROETHOLOGY SENSORY NEURAL AND BEHAVIORAL PHYSIOLOGY, Volume: 194, Issue: 4, Pages: 361-371, 2008
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