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1.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39133335

RESUMEN

The acquisition of an acoustic template is a fundamental component of vocal imitation learning, which is used to refine innate vocalizations and develop a species-specific song. In the absence of a model, birds fail to develop species typical songs. In zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata), tutored birds produce songs with a stereotyped sequence of distinct acoustic elements, or notes, which form the song motif. Songs of untutored individuals feature atypical acoustic and temporal structure. Here we studied songs and associated respiratory patterns of tutored and untutored male zebra finches to investigate whether similar acoustic notes influence the sequence of song elements. A subgroup of animals developed songs with multiple acoustically similar notes that are produced with alike respiratory motor gestures. These birds also showed increased syntactic variability in their adult motif. Sequence variability tended to occur near song elements which showed high similarity in acoustic structure and underlying respiratory motor gestures. The duration and depth of the inspirations preceding the syllables where syntactic variation occurred did not allow prediction of the following sequence of notes, suggesting that the varying duration and air requirement of the following expiratory pulse is not predictively encoded in the motor program. This study provides a novel method for calculation of motor/acoustic similarity, and the results of this study suggest that the note is a fundamental acoustic unit in the organization of the motif and could play a role in the neural code for song syntax.

2.
Curr Biol ; 34(3): 461-472.e7, 2024 02 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38183987

RESUMEN

The origin of novel traits, those that are not direct modifications of a pre-existing ancestral structure, remains a fundamental problem in evolutionary biology. For example, little is known about the evolutionary and developmental origins of the novel avian vocal organ, the syrinx. Located at the tracheobronchial junction, the syrinx is responsible for avian vocalization, but it is unclear whether avian vocal folds are homologous to the laryngeal vocal folds in other tetrapods or convergently evolved. Here, we identify a core developmental program involved in avian vocal fold formation and infer the morphology of the syrinx of the ancestor of modern birds. We find that this ancestral syrinx had paired sound sources induced by a conserved developmental pathway and show that shifts in these signals correlate with syringeal diversification. We show that, despite being derived from different developmental tissues, vocal folds in the syrinx and larynx have similar tissue composition and are established through a strikingly similar developmental program, indicating that co-option of an ancestral developmental program facilitated the origin of vocal folds in the avian syrinx.


Asunto(s)
Laringe , Pliegues Vocales , Animales , Pliegues Vocales/anatomía & histología , Laringe/anatomía & histología , Aves/anatomía & histología , Tráquea/anatomía & histología , Sonido , Vocalización Animal
3.
Curr Biol ; 32(20): R1095-R1100, 2022 10 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36283372

RESUMEN

Birds contribute prominently to the terrestrial soundscapes on Earth. The sounds can arise from different sources, such as drumming by woodpeckers, bill clapping by storks or feather vibrations in the courtship flights of snipes and hummingbirds. However, most avian sounds are generated in the avian vocal organ, the syrinx. Vocal behavior is used in many different contexts and features prominently in mate choice and reproduction. It is therefore thought to have played an important role in the remarkable diversification of birds.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Vocalización Animal , Animales , Aves , Tráquea , Plumas
4.
Proc Biol Sci ; 289(1982): 20220792, 2022 09 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36100028

RESUMEN

Many birds emit tonal song syllables even though the sound sources generate sound with rich upper harmonic energy content. This tonality is thought to arise in part from dynamically adjusted filtering of harmonic content. Here, we compare tonality of song syllables between vocal learners and non-learners to assess whether this characteristic is linked to the increased neural substrate that evolved with vocal learning. We hypothesize that vocal learning ability is correlated with enhanced ability for generating tonal sounds, because vocal production learners might also have an enhanced ability to articulate their vocal tracts and sound source for producing tonality. To test this hypothesis, we compared vocal learners and non-learners from two groups (186 passerines and 42 hummingbirds) by assessing tonality of song syllables. The data suggest that vocal learners in both clades have evolved to sing songs with higher tonality than the related, non-vocal learning clades, which is consistent with stronger roles for broadband dynamic filtering and adjustments to the sound source. In addition, oscine songs display higher tonality than those of hummingbirds. A complex interplay of vocal tract biomechanics, anatomical differences of the sound source as well as increased motor control through vocal learning facilitates generation of broad tonality.


Asunto(s)
Pájaros Cantores , Vocalización Animal , Animales , Aprendizaje , Sonido
5.
J Exp Biol ; 225(12)2022 06 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35587151

RESUMEN

Androgens mediate the expression of many reproductive behaviors, including the elaborate displays used to navigate courtship and territorial interactions. In some vertebrates, males can produce androgen-dependent sexual behavior even when levels of testosterone are low in the bloodstream. One idea is that select tissues make their own androgens from scratch to support behavioral performance. We first studied this phenomenon in the skeletal muscles that actuate elaborate sociosexual displays in downy woodpeckers and two songbirds. We show that the woodpecker display muscle maintains elevated testosterone when the testes are regressed in the non-breeding season. Both the display muscles of woodpeckers, as well as the display muscles in the avian vocal organ (syrinx) of songbirds, express all transporters and enzymes necessary to convert cholesterol into bioactive androgens locally. In a final analysis, we broadened our study by looking for these same transporters and enzymes in mammalian muscles that operate at different speeds. Using RNA-seq data, we found that the capacity for de novo synthesis is only present in 'superfast' extraocular muscle. Together, our results suggest that skeletal muscle specialized to generate extraordinary twitch times and/or extremely rapid contractile speeds may depend on androgenic hormones produced locally within the muscle itself. Our study therefore uncovers an important dimension of androgenic regulation of behavior.


Asunto(s)
Andrógenos , Pájaros Cantores , Animales , Masculino , Mamíferos , Contracción Muscular , Músculo Esquelético/fisiología , Conducta Sexual Animal/fisiología , Pájaros Cantores/fisiología , Testosterona/metabolismo
6.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2303: 487-493, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34626403

RESUMEN

Nerves and muscle interact to perform learned motor behavior such as birdsong. Glycosaminoglycans play a major role in the function of muscle as well as the formation and function of the neuromuscular junction. The alteration of GAG chains provides a unique opportunity to alter muscle behavior and thus motor control of a behavior. This chapter provides a method for observing the effects on mature birdsong of removal of GAG chains within syringeal muscle.


Asunto(s)
Músculos , Animales , Conducta Animal , Glicosaminoglicanos , Aprendizaje , Unión Neuromuscular , Vocalización Animal
7.
J Exp Biol ; 225(1)2022 01 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34748013

RESUMEN

During vertical climbing, the gravitational moment tends to pitch the animal's head away from the climbing surface and this may be countered by (1) applying a correcting torque at a discrete contact point, or (2) applying opposing horizontal forces at separate contact points to produce a free moment. We tested these potential strategies in small parrots with an experimental climbing apparatus imitating the fine branches and vines of their natural habitat. The birds climbed on a vertical ladder with four instrumented rungs that measured three-dimensional force and torque, representing the first measurements of multiple contacts from a climbing bird. The parrots ascend primarily by pulling themselves upward using the beak and feet. They resist the gravitational pitching moment with a free moment produced by horizontal force couples between the beak and feet during the first third of the stride and the tail and feet during the last third of the stride. The reaction torque from individual rungs did not counter, but exacerbated the gravitational pitching moment, which was countered entirely by the free moment. Possible climbing limitations were explored using two different rung radii, each with low and high friction surfaces. Rung torque was limited in the large-radius, low-friction condition; however, rung condition did not significantly influence the free moments produced. These findings have implications for our understanding of avian locomotor modules (i.e. coordinated actions of the head-neck, hindlimbs and tail), the use of force couples in vertical locomotion, and the evolution of associated structures.


Asunto(s)
Loros , Animales , Fenómenos Biomecánicos , Pie , Locomoción , Torque
8.
Ecol Evol ; 11(12): 7264-7277, 2021 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34188811

RESUMEN

During secondary contact between two species when hybrids are less fit than parents, mating signals are expected to diverge, while aggressive signals are expected to converge. If a single signal trait is used in both mating and aggression, then the dynamics between these two forces could influence the evolutionary trajectory of that trait. We studied such a situation in an avian hybrid zone between two Setophaga species, where birdsong is used in both mate attraction and territory defense. We hypothesized that song modules of the two species will show separate and distinct geographic patterns due to the influence of selective pressures for effective territorial aggression and for effective mate attraction. We conducted geographic cline analyses and playback experiments across this hybrid zone. We found an unexpected geographic pattern of asymmetric introgression of song rhythm, which may be explained by results of the playback experiments that suggest that differences in song rhythm serve a greater role in mate attraction than in territory defense. In contrast, differences in syllable morphology show little evidence of importance in mate attraction or territorial defense. Song features converge in the hybrid zone, yet patterns of trait change suggest that the song production modules may vary in their modes of development and inheritance. Syringeal motor gesturing, which gives rise to syllable morphology, shows a nonclinal mosaic pattern, suggesting that this trait may be predominantly learned. In contrast, respiratory patterning, which forms song rhythm, shows a clinal geographic transition, suggesting that this trait could be more innate. The results indicate that opposing forces act independently on song via distinct modules of the song production mechanism, driving complex patterns of song trait evolution.

9.
Ecol Evol ; 11(11): 6569-6578, 2021 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34141241

RESUMEN

Birdsong is used in reproductive context and, consequently, has been shaped by strong natural and sexual selection. The acoustic performance includes a multitude of acoustic and temporal characteristics that are thought to honestly reveal the quality of the singing individual.One major song feature is frequency and its modulation. Sound frequency can be actively controlled, but the control mechanisms differ between different groups. Two described mechanisms are pressure-driven frequency changes in suboscines and control by syringeal muscles in oscines.To test to what degree these different control mechanisms enhance or limit the exploitation of frequency space by individual species and families, we compared the use of frequency space by tyrannid suboscines and emberizid/passerellid oscines.We find that despite the different control mechanisms, the songs of species in both groups can contain broad frequency ranges and rapid and sustained frequency modulation (FM). The maximal values for these parameters are slightly higher in oscines.Furthermore, the mean frequency range of song syllables is substantially larger in oscines than suboscines. Species within each family group collectively exploit equally broadly the available frequency space.The narrower individual frequency ranges of suboscines likely indicate morphological specialization for particular frequencies, whereas muscular control of frequency facilitated broader exploitation of frequency space by individual oscine species.

10.
Proc Biol Sci ; 288(1953): 20210610, 2021 06 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34187198

RESUMEN

Activation of forebrain circuitry during sleep has been variably characterized as 'pre- or replay' and has been linked to memory consolidation. The evolutionary origins of this mechanism, however, are unknown. Sleep activation of the sensorimotor pathways of learned birdsong is a particularly useful model system because the muscles controlling the vocal organ are activated, revealing syringeal activity patterns for direct comparison with those of daytime vocal activity. Here, we show that suboscine birds, which develop their species-typical songs innately without the elaborate forebrain-thalamic circuitry of the vocal learning taxa, also engage in replay during sleep. In two tyrannid species, the characteristic syringeal activation patterns of the song could also be identified during sleep. Similar to song-learning oscines, the burst structure was more variable during sleep than daytime song production. In kiskadees (Pitangus sulphuratus), a second vocalization, which is part of a multi-modal display, was also replayed during sleep along with one component of the visual display. These data show unambiguously that variable 'replay' of stereotyped vocal motor programmes is not restricted to programmes confined within forebrain circuitry. The proposed effects on vocal motor programme maintenance are, therefore, building on a pre-existing neural mechanism that predates the evolution of learned vocal motor behaviour.


Asunto(s)
Pájaros Cantores , Vocalización Animal , Animales , Aprendizaje , Prosencéfalo , Sueño
11.
Chaos ; 31(12): 123132, 2021 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34972337

RESUMEN

We present a dynamical model for the avian respiratory system and report the measurement of its variables in normal breathing canaries (Serinus canaria). Fitting the parameters of the model, we are able to show that the birds in our study breathe at an aerodynamic resonance of their respiratory system. For different respiratory regimes, such as singing, where rapid respiratory gestures are used, the nonlinearities of the model lead to a shift in its resonances toward higher frequency values.


Asunto(s)
Canarios , Animales
12.
J Neurophysiol ; 124(6): 1857-1874, 2020 12 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33026896

RESUMEN

Songbirds produce complex vocalizations by coordinating neuromuscular control of syrinx, respiratory system, and upper vocal tract. The functional roles of syringeal muscles have been documented mainly with correlative data, which have suggested that synergistic activation plays a role in the fine control of vocal features. However, the specific involvement of individual muscles in achieving this fine control is still largely unknown. Here we investigate the contributions of the two main airflow controlling muscles, the dorsal and ventral tracheobronchial muscles in the zebra finch, through a new approach. Ablation of the muscle insertion on the cartilage framework reveals detailed insights into their respective roles in the fine control of song features. Unilateral ablation of a tracheobronchial muscle resulted in mostly subtle changes of the air sac pressure pattern and song features. Effects of ablation varied with the acoustic elements, thus indicating a context-dependent specific synergistic activation of muscles. High-frequency notes were most affected by the ablation, highlighting the importance of coordinated bilateral control. More pronounced effects on song features and air sac pressure were observed after bilateral ablation of the dorsal tracheobronchial muscles. The results illustrate that the gating muscles serve multiple functions in control of acoustic features and that each feature arises through context-dependent, synergistic activation patterns of syringeal muscles. Although many changes after the ablation are subtle, they fall within the perceptual range and thus may control behaviorally relevant features of sound. These data therefore provide important specific details about the underlying motor code for song production.NEW & NOTEWORTHY A new experimental approach was used to analyze the involvement of individual muscles in birdsong vocal control. Ablation of tracheobronchial muscles showed how these muscles contribute in manner specific to the acoustic structure of sound segments and how disruption of airflow regulation affects bilateral coordination. The results of this study illustrate that the gating muscles serve multiple functions in control of acoustic features and give further insight into the complex motor control of birdsong.


Asunto(s)
Pinzones/fisiología , Actividad Motora/fisiología , Músculos Respiratorios/fisiología , Tráquea/fisiología , Vocalización Animal/fisiología , Acústica , Animales , Electromiografía , Masculino
13.
J Exp Biol ; 223(Pt 11)2020 06 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32291320

RESUMEN

Performance trade-offs can dramatically alter an organism's evolutionary trajectory by making certain phenotypic outcomes unattainable. Understanding how these trade-offs arise from an animal's design is therefore an important goal of biology. To explore this topic, we studied how androgenic hormones, which regulate skeletal muscle function, influence performance trade-offs relevant to different components of complex reproductive behaviour. We conducted this work in golden-collared manakins (Manacus vitellinus), a neotropical bird in which males court females by rapidly snapping their wings together above their back. Androgens help mediate this behavior by radically increasing the twitch speed of a dorsal wing muscle (scapulohumeralis caudalis, SH), which actuates the bird's wing-snap. Through hormone manipulations and in situ muscle recordings, we tested how these positive effects on SH speed influence trade-offs with endurance. Indeed, this latter trait impacts the display by shaping signal length. We found that androgen-dependent increases in SH speed incur a cost to endurance, particularly when this muscle performs at its functional limits. Moreover, when behavioural data were overlaid on our muscle recordings, displaying animals appeared to balance display speed with fatigue-induced muscle fusion (physiological tetanus) to generate the fastest possible signal while maintaining an appropriate signal duration. Our results point to androgen action as a functional trigger of trade-offs in sexual performance - these hormones enhance one element of a courtship display, but in doing so, impede another.


Asunto(s)
Andrógenos , Passeriformes , Animales , Cortejo , Femenino , Masculino , Músculo Esquelético , Conducta Sexual Animal
14.
Phys Rev Lett ; 124(9): 098101, 2020 Mar 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32202899

RESUMEN

In this work we study the sound production mechanism of the raspy sounding song of the white-tipped plantcutter (Phytotoma rutila), a species with a most unusual vocalization. The biomechanics involved in the production of this song, and scaling arguments, allowed us to predict the precise way in which body size is encoded in its vocalizations. We tested this prediction through acoustic analysis of recorded songs, computational modeling of its unusual vocal strategy, and inspection of museum specimens captured across southeastern and south-central South America.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Biológicos , Passeriformes/fisiología , Vocalización Animal/fisiología , Animales , Fenómenos Biomecánicos , Tamaño Corporal/fisiología , Passeriformes/anatomía & histología
15.
Phys Rev E ; 102(6-1): 062415, 2020 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33466024

RESUMEN

The complex vocalizations found in different bird species emerge from the interplay between morphological specializations and neuromuscular control mechanisms. In this work we study the dynamical mechanisms used by a nonlearner bird from the Americas, the suboscine Pitangus sulphuratus, in order to achieve a characteristic timbre of some of its vocalizations. By measuring syringeal muscle activity, air sac pressure, and sound as the bird sings, we are able to show that the birds of this species manage to lock the frequency difference between two sound sources. This provides a precise control of sound amplitude modulations, which gives rise to a distinct timbral property.


Asunto(s)
Passeriformes/fisiología , Sonido , Vocalización Animal , Animales
16.
Dev Neurobiol ; 79(4): 350-369, 2019 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31002477

RESUMEN

Studies of avian vocal development without exposure to conspecific song have been conducted in many passerine species, and the resultant isolate song is often interpreted to represent an expression of the genetic code for conspecific song. There is wide recognition that vocal learning exists in oscine songbirds, but vocal learning has only been thoroughly investigated in a few model species, resulting in a narrow view of birdsong learning. By extracting acoustic signals from published spectrograms, we have reexamined the findings of isolate studies with a universally applicable semi-automated quantitative analysis regimen. When song features were analyzed in light of three different production aspects (respiratory, syringeal, and central programming of sequence), all three show marked interspecific variability in how close isolate song features are to normal. This implies that song learning mechanisms are more variable than is commonly recognized. Our results suggest that the interspecific variation shows no readily observable pattern reflecting phylogeny, which has implications for understanding the mechanisms behind the evolution of avian vocal communication. We emphasize that song learning in passerines provides an excellent opportunity to investigate the evolution of a complex, plastic trait from a phylogenetic perspective.


Asunto(s)
Aprendizaje , Pájaros Cantores , Vocalización Animal , Animales , Periodicidad , Filogenia , Espectrografía del Sonido , Especificidad de la Especie
17.
PLoS Biol ; 17(2): e2006507, 2019 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30730882

RESUMEN

The unique avian vocal organ, the syrinx, is located at the caudal end of the trachea. Although a larynx is also present at the opposite end, birds phonate only with the syrinx. Why only birds evolved a novel sound source at this location remains unknown, and hypotheses about its origin are largely untested. Here, we test the hypothesis that the syrinx constitutes a biomechanical advantage for sound production over the larynx with combined theoretical and experimental approaches. We investigated whether the position of a sound source within the respiratory tract affects acoustic features of the vocal output, including fundamental frequency and efficiency of conversion from aerodynamic energy to sound. Theoretical data and measurements in three bird species suggest that sound frequency is influenced by the interaction between sound source and vocal tract. A physical model and a computational simulation also indicate that a sound source in a syringeal position produces sound with greater efficiency. Interestingly, the interactions between sound source and vocal tract differed between species, suggesting that the syringeal sound source is optimized for its position in the respiratory tract. These results provide compelling evidence that strong selective pressures for high vocal efficiency may have been a major driving force in the evolution of the syrinx. The longer trachea of birds compared to other tetrapods made them likely predisposed for the evolution of a syrinx. A long vocal tract downstream from the sound source improves efficiency by facilitating the tuning between fundamental frequency and the first vocal tract resonance.


Asunto(s)
Acústica , Estructuras Animales/fisiología , Evolución Biológica , Modelos Biológicos , Animales , Aves/anatomía & histología , Simulación por Computador , Laringe/fisiología , Mamíferos/anatomía & histología , Sonido , Tráquea/fisiología , Vocalización Animal
18.
Elife ; 72018 10 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30375331

RESUMEN

Physiology's role in speciation is poorly understood. Motor systems, for example, are widely thought to shape this process because they can potentiate or constrain the evolution of key traits that help mediate speciation. Previously, we found that Neotropical manakin birds have evolved one of the fastest limb muscles on record to support innovations in acrobatic courtship display (Fuxjager et al., 2016a). Here, we show how this modification played an instrumental role in the sympatric speciation of a manakin genus, illustrating that muscle specializations fostered divergence in courtship display speed, which may generate assortative mating. However, innovations in contraction-relaxation cycling kinetics that underlie rapid muscle performance are also punctuated by a severe speed-endurance trade-off, blocking further exaggeration of display speed. Sexual selection therefore potentiated phenotypic displacement in a trait critical to mate choice, all during an extraordinarily fast species radiation-and in doing so, pushed muscle performance to a new boundary altogether.


Asunto(s)
Cortejo , Especiación Genética , Passeriformes/fisiología , Conducta Sexual Animal/fisiología , Simpatría , Animales , Fenotipo , Filogenia , Análisis de Regresión , Alas de Animales/fisiología
19.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(41): 10209-10217, 2018 10 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30249637

RESUMEN

In its most basic conception, a novelty is simply something new. However, when many previously proposed evolutionary novelties have been illuminated by genetic, developmental, and fossil data, they have refined and narrowed our concept of biological "newness." For example, they show that these novelties can occur at one or multiple levels of biological organization. Here, we review the identity of structures in the avian vocal organ, the syrinx, and bring together developmental data on airway patterning, structural data from across tetrapods, and mathematical modeling to assess what is novel. In contrast with laryngeal cartilages that support vocal folds in other vertebrates, we find no evidence that individual cartilage rings anchoring vocal folds in the syrinx have homology with any specific elements in outgroups. Further, unlike all other vertebrate vocal organs, the syrinx is not derived from a known valve precursor, and its origin involves a transition from an evolutionary "spandrel" in the respiratory tract, the site where the trachea meets the bronchi, to a target for novel selective regimes. We find that the syrinx falls into an unusual category of novel structures: those having significant functional overlap with the structures they replace. The syrinx, along with other evolutionary novelties in sensory and signaling modalities, may more commonly involve structural changes that contribute to or modify an existing function rather than those that enable new functions.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Aves/anatomía & histología , Aves/fisiología , Tráquea/anatomía & histología , Animales , Fósiles , Laringe/anatomía & histología , Laringe/fisiología , Filogenia , Sistema Respiratorio/anatomía & histología , Tráquea/fisiología , Pliegues Vocales , Vocalización Animal
20.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(33): 8436-8441, 2018 08 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30068604

RESUMEN

The coordination of complex vocal behaviors like human speech and oscine birdsong requires fine interactions between sensory and motor programs, the details of which are not completely understood. Here, we show that in sleeping male zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata), the activity of the song system selectively evoked by playbacks of their own song can be detected in the syrinx. Electromyograms (EMGs) of a syringeal muscle show playback-evoked patterns strikingly similar to those recorded during song execution, with preferred activation instants within the song. Using this global and continuous readout, we studied the activation dynamics of the song system elicited by different auditory stimuli. We found that synthetic versions of the bird's song, rendered by a physical model of the avian phonation apparatus, evoked very similar responses, albeit with lower efficiency. Modifications of autogenous or synthetic songs reduce the response probability, but when present, the elicited activity patterns match execution patterns in shape and timing, indicating an all-or-nothing activation of the vocal motor program.


Asunto(s)
Electromiografía , Pinzones/fisiología , Vocalización Animal/fisiología , Estimulación Acústica , Animales , Electrocardiografía , Masculino , Fonación
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