The pitch of male koalas' mating calls is about 20 times lower than it should be, given the Australian marsupial's relatively small size. Now, researchers have discovered the mystery behind koalas' low-pitched mating calls.
They found that koalas have a specialised sound-producing organ that has never before been seen in any other land-dwelling mammal.
The key feature of this newly described organ is its location outside the voice box, what scientists call the larynx.
"We have discovered that koalas possess an extra pair of vocal folds that are located outside the larynx, where the oral and nasal cavities connect," said Benjamin Charlton of the University of Sussex.
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The koala's bellow calls are produced as a continuous series of sounds on inhalation and exhalation, similar to a donkey's braying, Charlton explained.
On inhalation, koala bellows sound a bit like snoring. As the animals exhale, the sound is more reminiscent of belching.
They are also incredibly low-pitched, more typical of an animal the size of an elephant. Size is related to pitch in that the dimensions of the laryngeal vocal folds normally constrain the lowest frequency that an animal can generate.
Koalas have bypassed that constraint by putting those vocal folds in a new location. Charlton described the folds as two long, fleshy lips in the soft palette, just above the larynx at the junction between the oral and nasal cavities.
They may not look all that different from the laryngeal vocal folds of other mammals, but their location is highly unusual.
"To our knowledge, the only other example of a specialised sound-producing organ in mammals that is independent of the larynx are the phonic lips that toothed whales use to generate echolocation clicks," Charlton said.
The study was published in the Cell Press journal Current Biology.