Laboratory of Neuroendocrinology and Behavior, Department of Biological Sciences, Kent State University, Kent, OH, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
Brain Behav. 2020 Jun;10(6):e01629. doi: 10.1002/brb3.1629. Epub 2020 Apr 19.
Richardson's ground squirrels use alarm calls to warn conspecifics about potential predatory threats. Chirp calls typically indicate high levels of threat from airborne predators, while whistle calls are associated with lower levels of threat from terrestrial predators. These types of calls primarily elicit escape behaviors and increased vigilance in receivers, respectively. While much is known about the neural mechanisms involved in the production of vocalizations, less is known about the mechanisms important for the perception of alarm calls by receivers, and whether changes in perceived risk are associated with unique patterns of neuronal activation. Thus, to determine whether alarm calls associated with different levels of predation risk result in differential neuronal activation, we used immunohistochemistry to identify and quantify c-Fos immunopositive cells in brain regions important in stress, fear, danger, and reward, following alarm call reception.
We exposed 29 female Richardson's ground squirrels (10 control, 10 whistle receivers, and 9 chirp receivers) to playbacks of whistles, chirps, or a no-vocalization control. We then assessed neuronal activation via c-Fos immunohistochemistry in 12 brain regions.
Ground squirrels receiving high-threat "chirp" vocalizations had reduced neuronal activation in the medial amygdala and superior colliculus compared with controls. It is likely that changes in activity in these brain regions serve to alter the balance between approach and avoidance in turn promoting escape behaviors.
Thus, we conclude that in Richardson's ground squirrels, these brain regions are important for the perception of risk resulting from receiving alarm calls and allow for appropriate behavioral responses by receivers.
草原犬鼠利用警报叫声来警告同类潜在的捕食威胁。啁啾声通常表示来自空中捕食者的威胁程度较高,而口哨声则与来自陆地捕食者的威胁程度较低有关。这些类型的叫声分别主要引起接收者的逃避行为和提高警觉性。虽然对于产生叫声的神经机制已经了解很多,但对于接收者感知警报叫声的重要机制以及感知风险的变化是否与独特的神经元激活模式相关知之甚少。因此,为了确定与不同捕食风险水平相关的警报叫声是否会导致不同的神经元激活,我们使用免疫组织化学方法,在接收警报叫声后,确定并量化了与应激、恐惧、危险和奖励相关的重要脑区中 c-Fos 免疫阳性细胞。
我们让 29 只雌性草原犬鼠(10 只对照、10 只口哨接收者和 9 只啁啾接收者)收听口哨、啁啾或无发声控制的播放。然后,我们通过 c-Fos 免疫组织化学评估了 12 个脑区的神经元激活。
与对照组相比,接收高威胁“啁啾”叫声的草原犬鼠的中杏仁核和上丘的神经元激活减少。这些脑区的活动变化可能会改变接近和回避之间的平衡,从而促进逃避行为。
因此,我们得出结论,在草原犬鼠中,这些脑区对于接收警报叫声所产生的风险感知很重要,并允许接收者做出适当的行为反应。