1 / 30

Underwater hearing (of vertebrates)

Underwater hearing (of vertebrates). Human ear. The inner ear. Fish ears. Odontocete receiving system. “Acoustic fat” found ONLY here & melon. CT scan from Darlene Ketten. How do we test hearing?. Behavioral methods Animal trained Responds Go/no-go 2 alternative choice

zia
Download Presentation

Underwater hearing (of vertebrates)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Underwater hearing (of vertebrates)

  2. Human ear

  3. The inner ear

  4. Fish ears

  5. Odontocete receiving system “Acoustic fat” found ONLY here & melon CT scan from Darlene Ketten

  6. How do we test hearing? • Behavioral methods • Animal trained • Responds • Go/no-go • 2 alternative choice • Auditory brainstem response • No training required • Record firing of auditory cortex • Usually test pure tones • Occasionally test pulses • Thresholds much lower for pulsed sounds than pure tones

  7. Up-down staircase procedure 50% ‘catch trials’ (no signal present)

  8. Envelope following response Supin et al.

  9. Envelope following response ABR

  10. ABR threshold calculation

  11. ABR Magnitude

  12. Behavioral vs. ABR Yuen et al. 2005

  13. Behavioral vs. ABR • Behavioral • Requires months to train, months to test • Usually only 1 subject • ABR • Requires no training, rapid testing • Can be used to test for transient effects • Can be done on more species e.g. stranded animals, catch and release animals • Both require placement of a threshold that varies with conditions

  14. Fish hearing Tuna Damselfish Carp (goldfish) Salmon Cod Popper et al.

  15. 3 types of fish ears • General fish • No hearing specialization • 100-1,000 Hz • Best hearing 100-400 Hz • Specialized hearing • Goldfish, catfish, etc. • 100-3,000 Hz • Best hearing 300-1,000 Hz • High frequency adaptations • Clupeids (herring, shad, menhaden, sardine, anchovy) • Swimbladder morphology facilitates broad frequency hearing range • 1-200,000+ Hz

  16. Human Cetacean hearing From: Au, 1993

  17. Pinniped external ears Sea lion Elephant seal Harbor seal Kastak et al. 1999

  18. Pinniped in-air hearing Kastak et al. 1999

  19. Pinniped underwater hearing Kastak et al. 1999

  20. Fur seal In air vs. underwater – pressure or intensity? Harbor seal Pressure – assumes hearing mechanism Intensity – corrects for acoustic properties of media. Energy flow measure Does not require knowledge of stimulus mechanism Phocids (true seals) generally hear equally well in air and underwater – amphibious Elephant seal – a deep diver hears better underwater (bone conduction in air) Fur seals hear better in air – primarily terrestrial socialization and mating Elephant seal

  21. Hearing curves combined Sea lion Bottlenose dolphin Cod Catfish Harbor porpoise

  22. Project “Deep EAR” • Human hearing attenuates with increasing pressure (chamber experiments) • Beluga whales (a dolphin species) experience large pressure increases with diving • Effects on whistling and hearing in free-swimming animals Ridgway, S. H. et al. J Exp Biol 2001;204:3829-3841

  23. Up to 40 tones were presented to the whale during a dive Ridgway, S. H. et al. J Exp Biol 2001;204:3829-3841

  24. Depth effects – Beluga whales

  25. Increasing pressure (up to 300 m dives) Did not affect hearing Changed whistle spectra and intensity One whale only clicked at 300 m depth “Deep EAR” results

  26. Diving and elephant seal hearing Kastak et al. 2001

  27. Temporary threshold shifts • Aural fatigue • Hearing threshold increased • Recovery follows with varying time course (minutes – weeks) • Experiments in chinchillas and humans have shown the relationship between TTS and PTS (permanent threshold shifts) • Good predictor of auditory damage

  28. TTS Finneran et al 2005

  29. Temporary threshold shifts • Longer exposures to quieter sounds have the same effect as shorter exposures to louder sounds • Exposure intensity usually relative to hearing threshold except for impulsive sounds • The total exposure energy of the sound to which an animal is exposed important

  30. Signal effects on hearing • Received intensity (source level + range + environmental conditions) • Frequency • Duration • Timing (spacing between sounds)

More Related