Abstract

The acoustic startle response has been studied in great detail in rodents, however almost only in rats and mice, two very similar, domesticated animals. The Mongolian gerbil ( Meriones unguiculatus) is an established animal model for auditory research with good low-frequency hearing that covers most of the human audiogram. Gerbils have also been used to investigate the influence of domestication on auditory-related behavior. We characterized the acoustic startle response in gerbils and determined the influence of domestication by directly comparing animals from a domesticated with a wild-type strain. Mongolian gerbils showed a strong and reliable acoustic startle response to noise bursts above a threshold of 77–80 dB SPL which levels out above 115 dB SPL. Only domesticated gerbils showed short-term habituation to repetitive stimulation while the responses in wild-type animals remained at about the same level. Prepulse inhibition of the acoustic startle response by noise burst or gap-in-noise prepulses in gerbils was strong, maximum prepulse inhibition induced by noise bursts was between 67% (wild-types) and 90% (domesticated). Differences between domesticated and wild-type gerbils were even more pronounced for gap-prepulse inhibition. For a gap duration of 50 ms with a lead time of 100 ms, percent inhibition in domesticated gerbils (80%) was almost double the inhibition in wild-types. Such strong prepulse inhibition can be very useful as a basis for efficient audiometric measurements in gerbils.

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