4.5 Article

Rats concatenate 22 kHz and 50 kHz calls into a single utterance

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 220, Issue 5, Pages 814-821

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.151720

Keywords

Ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs); Vocal production; Larynx and breath control; Vocal combinatorial capacity

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Funding

  1. College of Veterinary Medicine at Midwestern University

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Traditionally, the ultrasonic vocal repertoire of rats is differentiated into 22 kHz and 50 kHz calls, two categories that contain multiple different call types. Although both categories have different functions, they are sometimes produced in the same behavioral context. Here, we investigated the peripheral mechanisms that generate sequences of calls from both categories. Male rats, either sexually experienced or naive, were exposed to an estrous female. The majority of sexually naive male rats produced 22 kHz and 50 kHz calls on their first encounter with a female. We recorded subglottal pressure and electromyographic activity of laryngeal muscles and found that male rats sometimes concatenate long 22 kHz calls and 50 kHz trill calls into an utterance produced during a single breath. The qualitatively different laryngeal motor patterns for both call types were produced serially during the same breathing cycle. The finding demonstrates flexibility in the laryngeal- respiratory coordination during ultrasonic vocal production, which has not been previously documented physiologically in non- human mammals. Since only naive males produced the 22 kHz-trills, it is possible that the production is experience dependent.

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