4.3 Article

Seasonal plasticity of auditory saccular sensitivity in sneaker type II male plainfin midshipman fish, Porichthys notatus

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00359-017-1157-9

Keywords

Hearing; Particle acceleration; Teleost; Saccule; Hair cells

Funding

  1. NIH Auditory Neuroscience Training Grant [2T32DC005361-11]
  2. University of Washington Bridge Fund

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Adult female and nesting (type I) male midshipman fish (Porichthys notatus) exhibit an adaptive form of auditory plasticity for the enhanced detection of social acoustic signals. Whether this adaptive plasticity also occurs in sneaker type II males is unknown. Here, we characterize auditory-evoked potentials recorded from hair cells in the saccule of reproductive and non-reproductive sneaker type II male midshipman to determine whether this sexual phenotype exhibits seasonal, reproductive state-dependent changes in auditory sensitivity and frequency response to behaviorally relevant auditory stimuli. Saccular potentials were recorded from the middle and caudal region of the saccule while sound was presented via an underwater speaker. Our results indicate saccular hair cells from reproductive type II males had thresholds based on measures of sound pressure and acceleration (re. 1 A mu Pa and 1 ms(-2), respectively) that were similar to 8-21 dB lower than non-reproductive type II males across a broad range of frequencies, which include the dominant higher frequencies in type I male vocalizations. This increase in type II auditory sensitivity may potentially facilitate eavesdropping by sneaker males and their assessment of vocal type I males for the selection of cuckoldry sites during the breeding season.

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