Middle ear pneumatization in nonhuman primates: A comparative analysis

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TitreMiddle ear pneumatization in nonhuman primates: A comparative analysis
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuteursBernardi M, Couette S, Smith CChateau, Montuire S
JournalAMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Volume169
Pagination540-556
Date PublishedJUL
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0002-9483
Mots-clésallometry, middle ear, nonhuman primates, Phylogeny, pneumatization
Résumé

Objectives We test the effects of body mass and phylogeny on middle ear cavity pneumatization, and the role of pneumatization in hearing function, spanning the anatomical, ecological, and behavioral diversity of nonhuman primates. Materials and methods All cavities were segmented in middle ear scans of 96 specimens, from 12 strepsirrhine and 15 haplorhine extant species. We measured the tympanic cavity (TC) separately, and all other middle ear spaces together (MES), calculating the degree of pneumatization with the surface area-to-volume ratio. We tested body mass effect with linear regression; we evaluated the phylogenetic signal and selection patterns, using a Kappa statistic test, and Ornstein-Uhlenbeck models (OU). We investigated the link between pneumatization and hearing sensitivity using phylogenetic regression. Results Testing body mass reveals an allometric pattern for both TC and MES dimensions. Degree of pneumatization in MES is dependent on body mass in haplorhines: larger animals have more pneumatized MES. Differences at various taxonomic ranks were observed for MES, while no phylogenetic influence was observed for TC. Infraorder selection patterns are different. Auditory performance is significantly related to degree of pneumatization, indicating that a pneumatized middle ear is associated with better perception of low frequencies. Discussion Pneumatization in MES is under differential selective pressure, indicating several optima for this trait. Pneumatization in MES probably modifies hearing sensitivity through pressure regulation mechanisms, auditory bulla size reduction, and frequency modulation. This could explain strepsirrhine adaptation to high-frequency perception, while haplorhine auditory perception is adapted to a broader sound range, including high and low frequencies.

DOI10.1002/ajpa.23848