Publication | Open Access
Evolutionary Origins for Social Vocalization in a Vertebrate Hindbrain–Spinal Compartment
208
Citations
17
References
2008
Year
Brain MechanismVocal TetrapodsSensory SystemsSocial VocalizationPrimate BehaviorMacroevolutionary EventsMorphological EvidenceBehavioral SciencesAcoustic CommunicationBehavioral NeuroscienceNeuroecologyNervous SystemVertebrate BiologyBiologyAnimal BehaviourDevelopmental BiologyBioacousticsNeuroanatomySocial BehaviorEvolutionary BiologyNatural SciencesAnimal CommunicationNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicineAnimal BehaviorAuditory System
The macroevolutionary events leading to neural innovations for social communication, such as vocalization, are essentially unexplored. Many fish vocalize during female courtship and territorial defense, as do amphibians, birds, and mammals. Here, we map the neural circuitry for vocalization in larval fish and show that the vocal network develops in a segment-like region across the most caudal hindbrain and rostral spinal cord. Taxonomic analysis demonstrates a highly conserved pattern between fish and all major lineages of vocal tetrapods. We propose that the vocal basis for acoustic communication among vertebrates evolved from an ancestrally shared developmental compartment already present in the early fishes.
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