Neural activity during call production in the female zebra finch homolog
of the male forebrain song system
Abstract
Female zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata) are unable to sing due to the
vestigial development of forebrain song control areas such as the RA
(nucleus robustus archistriatalis), a premotor nucleus of the song
control pathway. In male zebra finches RA is also involved in call-based
vocal communication in addition to song control. Here, we monitored the
activity of RA neurons during vocal communication in freely behaving
females using a miniaturized telemetric recording device combined with
telemetric audio recording. Neurons in the RA region showed premotor
activity associated with stack and tet calls, two innate short-range
social calls produced by both sexes. RA units were active when females
called to respond to a male partner’s call or to initiate a partner’s
call. However, spontaneous, regularly firing units, typical of male RA,
were very rare in females or, when found, showed no association with
vocal output. Despite the small number of adult female RA neurons, these
neurons are not functionless, but are involved in call-based
communication.