Abstract: | Summated impulse discharges to taste solutions were recordedfrom intact and transected IXth nerves in the Mongolian gerbil(Meriones unguiculatus). Five taste stimuli were used: 0.3 MNH4Cl, 0.3 M NaCl, 0.01 M HCl, 0.01 M quinine hydrochloride,and 0.5 M sucrose. 0.3 M NH4Cl was the most effective stimulus.Taste responses from intact nerves were stable for more than10 hours. Following IXth nerve transection, the peak summatedresponse to 0.3 M NH4Cl declined by 50% in a mean of 119 min.(Some animals failed to show this taste response decline inthe winter months.) The transected IXth nerve's spontaneousactivity and responses to other taste solutions also typicallydeclined. The continued presence of normal compound action potentialsindicated that the transection-induced decline in taste responsesdid not result from a failure of impulse propagation mechanismsin the nerve trunk. The results are consistent with the propositionthat transection interferes with axonal transport of materialsvital to the short-term maintenance of taste responses. |