Peripheral and Central Auditory Specialization in a Gliding Marsupial, the Feathertail Glider, Acrobates pygmaeus
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Brain, Behavior and Evolution
- Vol. 33 (6) , 325-333
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000115940
Abstract
Two specialized features are described in the auditory system of Acrobates pygmaeus, a small gliding marsupial. Firstly, the ear canal includes a transverse disk of bone that partly occludes the canal near the eardrum. The resultant narrow-necked chamber above the eardrum appears to attenuate sound across a broad frequency range, except at 27–29 kHz at which a net gain of sound pressure occurs. Secondly, the lateral medulla is hypertrophied at the level of the cochlear nucleus, forming a massive lateral lobe comprised of multipolar cells and granule cells. This lobe has connections with the auditory nerve and the cerebellum. Speculations are advanced about the functions of these structures in gliding behaviour and predator avoidance.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Brain Stem Auditory Nuclei and Their Connections in a Carnivorous Marsupial, the Northern Native Cat (Dasyurus hallucatus)Brain, Behavior and Evolution, 1986
- The auditory brainstem nuclei and some of their projections to the inferior colliculus in the North American opossumNeuroscience, 1983
- The Auditory Brain Stem of a MarsupialBrain, Behavior and Evolution, 1981
- The primate cochlear nuclei: Loss of lamination as a phylogenetic processJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1980
- Autoradiographic and histological studies of postnatal neurogenesis. I. A longitudinal investigation of the kinetics, migration and transformation of cells incoorporating tritiated thymidine in neonate rats, with special reference to postnatal neurogenesis in some brain regionsJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1966