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Journal ArticleDOI

The ear in subterranean insectivora and rodentia in comparison with ground-dwelling representatives. I. Sound conducting system of the middle ear.

TLDR
It is, however, argued that while selective pressures in the subterranean ecotope promoted hearing of low frequencies, hearing sensitivity did not have to be enhanced and hearing sensitivity was not required for sensitive tuning to low frequencies.
Abstract
Compared to acoustically unspecialized mammals (soricids and murids), the middle ear of subterranean insectivores and rodents (twelve species of six families examined) was clearly distinguished and characterized by many common features: rather round and relatively larger eardrum without a pars flaccida; reduced gonial; loose or no connection between the malleus and the tympanic bone; reduced and straightened transversal part of the malleus; enlarged incus; increased and rather flat incudo-mallear joint; rather parallel position of the mallear manubrium and incudal crus longum in some species (and their fusion in bathyergids); reduced or even missing middle ear muscles. Convergent occurrence of these structural features in taxa of different origin and their generally derived character suggest that they cannot be categorized as degenerative. The form of the stapes can be considered as a non-adaptive trait; it was taxon specific yet remarkably polymorphous in some species and exhibited no convergent features among subterranean mammals. Structural retrogression resulting in a columella-like stapes was observed in some species lacking the stapedial artery. The stapedial base was relatively larger than in unspecialized mammals. The subterranean mammals did not exhibit conspicuously enlarged eardrums as would be required for sensitive tuning to low frequencies. It is, however, argued that while selective pressures in the subterranean ecotope promoted hearing of low frequencies, hearing sensitivity did not have to be enhanced.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Middle ear structures in fossorial mammals: a comparison with non‐fossorial species

TL;DR: In this article, a large data set, comprising certain measurements of middle ear structures in mammals, was compiled both from measurements made by the author and from the literature, in an attempt to identify general trends among fossorial groups.
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Reexamination of the morphological evidence for the cohort Epitheria (Mammalia, Eutheria)

TL;DR: Reexamined the distributions of stapedial morphologies and positions of the foramen ovale across Recent and extinct mammals and nonmammalian cynodonts and concludes that topology 2 best reflects the current state of knowledge.
Journal ArticleDOI

Of mice, moles and guinea pigs: functional morphology of the middle ear in living mammals.

TL;DR: A more rigorous comparative approach and a better appreciation of the complex patterns of convergent and divergent evolution reflected in the middle ear structures of living mammals are also needed, in order to put findings from different species into the appropriate context.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structure and function of the mammalian middle ear. II: Inferring function from structure.

TL;DR: An introduction to middle ear function targetted towards biological scientists with little experience in the field of auditory acoustics, showing that functional inferences based on middle ear anatomy are more likely to be valid at low frequencies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acoustic communication underground: vocalization characteristics in subterranean social mole-rats (Cryptomys sp., Bathyergidae)

TL;DR: In captive adult Zambian mole-rats 14 different sounds have been recorded during different behavioural contexts, the sound analysis revealed that all sounds occurred in a low and middle frequency range with main energy below 10 kHz.
References
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The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm: a critique of the adaptationist programme

TL;DR: The adaptationist programme is faulted for its failure to distinguish current utility from reasons for origin, and Darwin’s own pluralistic approach to identifying the agents of evolutionary change is supported.
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The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm: a critique of the adaptationist programme

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors criticise the adaptationist program for its inability to distinguish current utility from reasons for origin (male tyrannosaurs may have used their diminutive front legs to titillate female partners, but this will not explain why they got so small).
Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptive Convergence and Divergence of Subterranean Mammals

TL;DR: The objective of this paper is to compare and contrast the evolutionary patterns and adaptive strategies of completely subterranean mammals and to suggest a theory specifying the selective forces operating in this unique environment.
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Auditory sensitivity of the albino rat.

TL;DR: The auditory sensitivity of the (Sprague-Dawley strain) albino rat was determined by the conditioned suppression technique and there was no evidence for a highly specialized tuning of the audiogram to tones in the 30-40 kHz region.
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Hearing in Glires: Domestic rabbit, cotton rat, feral house mouse, and kangaroo rat

TL;DR: The results of hearing tests conducted on these four species are presented to expand the available sample of complete mamnmlian audiograms and update the sample further by inclusion of the audiograms of other species which have recently become available, and to apply these results to the analysis of the selective pressures involved in the evolution of high-frequency and low-frequency hearing limits.
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