Department of Botany and Zoology, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa.
Department of Anatomy and Physiology, and Centre for Veterinary Wildlife Research, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, Onderstepoort, South Africa.
Sci Rep. 2022 Mar 28;12(1):5251. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-09090-3.
Birds exhibit wide variation in their use of aquatic environments, on a spectrum from entirely terrestrial, through amphibious, to highly aquatic. Although there are limited empirical data on hearing sensitivity of birds underwater, mounting evidence indicates that diving birds detect and respond to sound underwater, suggesting that some modifications of the ear may assist foraging or other behaviors below the surface. In air, the tympanic middle ear acts as an impedance matcher that increases sound pressure and decreases sound vibration velocity between the outside air and the inner ear. Underwater, the impedance-matching task is reversed and the ear is exposed to high hydrostatic pressures. Using micro- and nano-CT (computerized tomography) scans of bird ears in 127 species across 26 taxonomic orders, we measured a suite of morphological traits of importance to aerial and aquatic hearing to test predictions relating to impedance-matching in birds with distinct aquatic lifestyles, while accounting for allometry and phylogeny. Birds that engage in underwater pursuit and deep diving showed the greatest differences in ear structure relative to terrestrial species. In these heavily modified ears, the size of the input areas of both the tympanic membrane and the columella footplate of the middle ear were reduced. Underwater pursuit and diving birds also typically had a shorter extrastapedius, a reduced cranial air volume and connectivity and several modifications in line with reversals of low-to-high impedance-matching. The results confirm adaptations of the middle ear to aquatic lifestyles in multiple independent bird lineages, likely facilitating hearing underwater and baroprotection, while potentially constraining the sensitivity of aerial hearing.
鸟类在利用水生环境方面表现出广泛的变化,从完全陆生到半水生再到高度水生。尽管有关鸟类水下听力敏感性的经验数据有限,但越来越多的证据表明,潜水鸟类在水下能探测到并对声音做出反应,这表明耳朵的某些结构变化可能有助于在水面下觅食或进行其他行为。在空气中,鼓膜中耳充当阻抗匹配器,它增加了空气和内耳之间的声压,并降低了声振动速度。在水下,阻抗匹配的任务相反,耳朵会暴露在高静水压力下。通过对 26 个分类目中的 127 种鸟类的耳朵进行微纳计算机断层扫描(CT),我们测量了一系列对空中和水下听力有重要意义的形态特征,以检验与具有明显水生生活方式的鸟类的阻抗匹配相关的预测,同时考虑到了同形性和系统发育。那些从事水下追捕和深潜的鸟类的耳朵结构与陆地物种相比有很大的差异。在这些高度变异的耳朵中,鼓膜和中耳的听小骨足板的输入区域的大小都减小了。从事水下追捕和潜水的鸟类通常还具有更短的外鼓索、更小的颅腔空气体积和连通性,以及与从低到高阻抗匹配的反转相适应的几种结构变化。研究结果证实了中耳在多个独立鸟类谱系中对水生生活方式的适应,这可能有助于水下听力和抗高压保护,同时可能限制了空中听力的灵敏度。