Skip to main content
Journal of Anatomy logoLink to Journal of Anatomy
. 1989 Apr;163:117–121.

The larynx of roaring and non-roaring cats.

M H Hast 1
PMCID: PMC1256521  PMID: 2606766

Abstract

Dissections were made of the larynges of 14 species of the cat family, with representative specimens from all genera. It was found that the vocal folds of the larynx of genus Panthera (with the exception of the snow leopard) form the basic structure of a sound generator well-designed to produce a high acoustical energy. Combined with an efficient sound radiator (vocal tract) that can be adjusted in length, a Panthera can use its vocal instrument literally to blow its own horn with a 'roar'. Also, it is proposed that laryngeal morphology can be used as an anatomical character in mammalian taxonomy.

Full text

PDF
120

Images in this article


Articles from Journal of Anatomy are provided here courtesy of Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland

RESOURCES