‘Switching-off’ of an auditory interneuron during stridulation in the acridid grasshopperChorthippus biguttulus L.
- 1 November 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Comparative Physiology A
- Vol. 158 (6) , 861-871
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01324827
Abstract
Summary In freely moving grasshoppers of the speciesChorthippus biguttulus compound potentials were recorded from the neck connectives with chronically implanted hook electrodes. The spikes of one large auditory interneuron, known as the G-neuron (Kalmring 1975a, b) were clearly distinguishable in the recordings and the neuron was identified by its physiology and morphology. In quiescent grasshoppers the G-neuron responds to auditory and vibratory stimuli, but responses to both stimuli are suppressed during stridulation in males (Fig. 1, top, Fig. 7). When a male's wings were removed so that the stridulatory movements of its hindlegs produced no sound, the suppression of the G-neuron response still occurred (Fig. 1, bottom). When proprioceptive feedback from the hindlegs was reduced, by forced autotomy of the legs, the switching-off remained incomplete (Fig. 3) (production of stridulatory patterns was inferred on the basis of electromyograms from the relevant thoracic musculature). Imposed movement of the hindlegs, on the other hand, suppressed the G-neuron response in a graded fashion, depending on the frequency of the movement (Figs. 4 and 5). These experiments suggest that the switching-off is brought about by a combination of proprioceptive feedback and central efferences. The switching-off phenomenon could either protect the grasshopper's auditory pathway from undesired effects of overloading by its own intense song (e.g. self-induced habituation as described by Krasne and Wine 1977) and should therefore apply for most auditory neurons. Alternatively it could prevent escape reflexes from being triggered by stridulatory self-stimulation and consequently might apply only for neurons involved in such networks (as the G-neuron might be).Keywords
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