Gekko gecko as a model organism for understanding aspects of laryngeal vocal evolution.

Ruth Gutjahr, Loïc Kéver, Thorin Jonsson, Daniela Talamantes Ontiveros, Boris P Chagnaud, Anthony Herrel

The Journal of experimental biology(2024)

Cited 0|Views5
No score
Abstract
The ability to communicate through vocalization plays a key role in the survival of animals across all vertebrate groups. While avian reptiles have received much attention relating to their stunning sound repertoire, non-avian reptiles have been wrongfully assumed to have less elaborate vocalization types and little is known about the biomechanics of sound production and their underlying neural pathways. We investigated alarm calls of Gekko gecko using audio and cineradiographic recordings of their alarm calls. Acoustic analysis revealed three distinct call types: a sinusoidal call type (type 1), a train-like call type, characterized by distinct pulse trains (type 3), and an intermediary type, which showed both sinusoidal and pulse train components (type 2). Kinematic analysis of cineradiographic recordings showed that laryngeal movements differ significantly between respiratory and vocal behavior: during respiration, animals repeatedly moved their jaws to partially open their mouths, which was accompanied by small glottal movements. During vocalization, the glottis was pulled back, contrasting with what has previously been reported. In-vitro retrograde tracing of the nerve innervating the laryngeal constrictor and dilator muscles revealed round to fusiform motoneurons in the hindbrain-spinal cord transition ipsilateral to the labeled nerve. Taken together, our observations provide insight into the alarm calls generated by G. gecko, the biomechanics of this sound generation and the underlying organization of motoneurons involved in the generation of vocalizations. Our observations suggest that G. gecko may be an excellent non-avian reptile model organism for enhancing our understanding of the evolution of vertebrate vocalization.
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined