Department of Biology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA
Department of Biological Sciences, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ 07102, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2020 Dec 21;223(Pt 24):jeb236489. doi: 10.1242/jeb.236489.
The tympanic middle ear is an adaptive sensory novelty that evolved multiple times in all the major terrestrial tetrapod groups to overcome the impedance mismatch generated when aerial sound encounters the air-skin boundary. Many extant tetrapod species have lost their tympanic middle ears, yet they retain the ability to detect airborne sound. In the absence of a functional tympanic ear, extratympanic hearing may occur via the resonant qualities of air-filled body cavities, sensitivity to seismic vibration, and/or bone conduction pathways to transmit sound from the environment to the ear. We used auditory brainstem response recording and laser vibrometry to assess the contributions of these extratympanic pathways for airborne sound in atympanic salamanders. We measured auditory sensitivity thresholds in eight species and observed sensitivity to low-frequency sound and vibration from 0.05-1.2 kHz and 0.02-1.2 kHz, respectively. We determined that sensitivity to airborne sound is not facilitated by the vibrational responsiveness of the lungs or mouth cavity. We further observed that, although seismic sensitivity probably contributes to sound detection under naturalistic scenarios, airborne sound stimuli presented under experimental conditions did not produce vibrations detectable to the salamander ear. Instead, threshold-level sound pressure is sufficient to generate translational movements in the salamander head, and these sound-induced head vibrations are detectable by the acoustic sensors of the inner ear. This extratympanic hearing mechanism mediates low-frequency sensitivity in vertebrate ears that are unspecialized for the detection of aerial sound pressure, and may represent a common mechanism for terrestrial hearing across atympanic tetrapods.
中耳是一种适应性感觉新奇结构,它在所有主要的陆栖四足动物群体中多次进化,以克服当空气传播的声音遇到空气-皮肤边界时产生的阻抗不匹配。许多现存的四足动物物种已经失去了中耳,但它们仍然保留了检测空气传播声音的能力。在没有功能性中耳的情况下,外中耳听觉可能通过充满空气的体腔的共振特性、对地震振动的敏感性以及/或骨导途径发生,这些途径将声音从环境传输到耳朵。我们使用听觉脑干反应记录和激光测振仪来评估这些外中耳途径在外中耳缺失的情况下对空气传播声音的贡献。我们在 8 个物种中测量了听觉敏感性阈值,并观察到对低频声音和振动的敏感性,分别为 0.05-1.2 kHz 和 0.02-1.2 kHz。我们确定,空气传播声音的敏感性不受肺部或口腔的振动反应的促进。我们进一步观察到,尽管地震敏感性可能有助于在自然场景下进行声音检测,但在实验条件下呈现的空气传播声音刺激不会产生可被蜥蜴耳朵检测到的振动。相反,阈强度的声压足以产生蜥蜴头部的平移运动,这些由声音引起的头部振动可以被内耳的声学传感器检测到。这种外中耳听觉机制介导了对空气传播声压不敏感的脊椎动物耳朵的低频敏感性,并且可能代表了无中耳四足动物陆地听觉的共同机制。