Lizard Ear
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This article is still under construction. |
Most of the lizards seem to hear in the same range as the green iguana (500 to 4,000Hz range), with a sensitivity peak at 700 Hz, equal to about 24 dB. For lizards lacking a tympanic membrane, such as the lesser (Northern) earless lizard (Holbrookia maculata), hearing is limited to lower frequencies.
Gekkonids who vocalize have both high sensitivity and high frequency, up into the 10,000Hz range.
Anatomy
The ear has auditory and vestibular functions. In many lizards the external ear is greatly reduced and most species have a superficial tympanum. Exceptions include geckos and monitors which have external ear canals.
There is a single ossicle, the columella. Middle and inner ears and eustachian tubes are present.