4.5 Article

Evoked auditory potentials from African mole-rats and coruros reveal disparity in subterranean rodent hearing

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 224, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.243371

Keywords

Auditory brainstem response; Auditory threshold; Call amplitude; Naked mole-rat; Common mole-rat; Spalacopus cyanus

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Funding

  1. German Academic Scholarship Foundation (Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes e.V.)

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The study compared auditory responses in African and South American subterranean rodents, finding low auditory sensitivity in African mole-rats and similar auditory capabilities to epigeic rodents in coruros. The results suggest a need for open-mindedness regarding interpretations of hearing physiology in subterranean mammals.
Hearing in subterranean rodents exhibits numerous peculiarities, including low sensitivity and restriction to a narrow range of comparatively low frequencies. Past studies provided two conflicting hypotheses explaining how these derived traits evolved: structural degeneration and adaptive specialization. To further elucidate this issue, we recorded auditory brainstem responses from three species of social subterranean rodents that differ in the degree of specialization to the underground habitat: the naked mole-rat (Heterocephalus glaber) and the Mashona mole-rat (Fukomys darlingi), which represent the ancient lineage of African mole-rats (Bathyergidae), and the coruro (Spalacopus cyanus), a South American rodent (Octodontidae) that adopted a subterranean lifestyle in more recent geological time. Additionally, we measured call amplitudes of social vocalizations to study auditory vocal coupling. We found elevated auditory thresholds and severe hearing range restrictions in the African mole-rats, with hearing in naked mole-rats tending to be more sensitive than in Mashona molerats, in which hearing notably deteriorated with increasing age. In contrast, hearing in coruros was similar to that of epigeic rodents, with its range extending into ultrasonic frequencies. However, as in the mole-rats, the coruros' region of best hearing was located at low frequencies close to 1 kHz. We argue that the auditory sensitivity of African mole-rats, although remarkably poor, has been underestimated by recent studies, whereas data on coruros conform to previous results. Considering the available evidence, we propose to be open to both degenerative and adaptive interpretations of hearing physiology in subterranean mammals, as each may provide convincing explanations for specific auditory traits observed.

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