Warren Megan R, Young Larry J, Liu Robert C
Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Center for Translational Social Neuroscience, Emory National Primate Research Center, Atlanta, GA, USA.
bioRxiv. 2024 Jul 24:2024.07.24.604991. doi: 10.1101/2024.07.24.604991.
Recognizing conspecifics is vitally important for differentiating kin, mates, offspring and social threats. Although often reliant upon chemical or visual cues, individual recognition across the animal kingdom is also facilitated by unique acoustic signatures in vocalizations. However, amongst the large superfamily of rodents that encompasses laboratory species amenable to neurobiological studies, there is scant behavioral evidence for individual vocal recognition despite individual acoustic variation. Playback studies have found evidence for coarse communicative functions like mate attraction and territorial defense, but limited finer ability to discriminate known individuals' vocalizations. Such a capacity would be adaptive for species that form lifelong pair bonds requiring partner identification across timescales, distances and sensory modalities, so to improve the chance of finding individual vocal recognition in a rodent, we investigated vocal communication in the prairie vole () - one of the few socially monogamous mammals. We found that the ultrasonic vocalizations of adult prairie voles can communicate individual identity. Even though the vocalizations of individual males change after cohabitating with a female to form a bond, acoustic variation across individuals is greater than within an individual so that vocalizations of different males in a common context are identifiable above chance. Critically, females behaviorally discriminate their partner's vocalizations over a stranger's, even if emitted to another stimulus female. These results establish the acoustic and behavioral foundation for individual vocal recognition in prairie voles, where neurobiological tools enable future studies revealing its causal neural mechanisms.
识别同种个体对于区分亲属、配偶、后代和社会威胁至关重要。尽管通常依赖化学或视觉线索,但动物界的个体识别也通过发声中的独特声学特征得以实现。然而,在包含适合神经生物学研究的实验物种的大型啮齿动物超科中,尽管存在个体声学差异,但个体发声识别的行为证据却很少。回放研究发现了诸如配偶吸引和领地防御等粗略交流功能的证据,但区分已知个体发声的更精细能力有限。这种能力对于形成终身伴侣关系、需要在不同时间尺度、距离和感官模式下识别伴侣的物种具有适应性,因此为了提高在啮齿动物中发现个体发声识别的机会,我们研究了草原田鼠( )的发声交流——少数社会一夫一妻制哺乳动物之一。我们发现成年草原田鼠的超声波发声可以传达个体身份。尽管雄性个体与雌性同居形成伴侣关系后发声会发生变化,但个体间的声学差异大于个体内部差异,因此在共同情境中不同雄性的发声可以被高于随机概率地识别出来。至关重要的是,雌性在行为上能够区分伴侣的发声和陌生雄性发出的发声,即使是对另一只刺激雌性发出的发声也是如此。这些结果为草原田鼠个体发声识别奠定了声学和行为基础,神经生物学工具使未来能够揭示其因果神经机制的研究成为可能。