Response patterns to click stimulation of 907 single cochlear nerve fibers, having characteristic frequencies below 2000 Hz, can be separated into two populations on the basis of salient features. Population I consists of approximately 93% of the fibers, and Population II consists of approximately 7% of the fibers. A statistical description of the correlation between properties of response patterns of Population I fibers and stimulus level and characteristic frequency is given. For the Population I fibers, with characteristic frequencies below 500 Hz, deviations from the precise interlacing of preferred times of spike discharges in response to rarefaction and condensation clicks, as well as some instances of biased response to condensation clicks are described. The features that set Population II fibers apart from those of Population I are given, and a correlation of these populations with anatomical details of innervation is suggested.