deep-seadeep-sea lights deep-sea fishesfishes hearing, touch, taste, etc

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Page 3: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Hearing, touch, taste, etc.

Page 4: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

water is 83x denser than air sound travels 4.5x faster in water

- not rapidly attenuated; difficult to localizelow frequencies propagate better, faster

Sound transmission in water

Page 5: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

water is 100x denser than air sound travels 4.5x faster in water

- not rapidly attenuated; difficult to localizelow frequencies propagate better, faster

sound: small vibrations with particle displacement near source- “near field” (a few meters)sound pressure component – “far field”

Sound transmission in water

Page 6: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Hearing and lateral line (acoustico-lateralis system)

Lateral line – sound reception in far field - "distant touch"detects particle displacement

Ears - sound reception in near field - acceleration, equilibriumdetects pressure waves

Page 7: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Lateral line system

superficial (free) neuromasts on body surface, or in shallow pits or grooves

canal neuromasts in lateral line

Perciformes, Centrarchidae: black crappie

Perciformes, Moronidae: white perch

Page 8: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

superficial neuromast

Page 9: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

superficial neuromast

canal neuromasts

Page 10: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Lateral line system

location and type of neuromasts optimized for particular prey, environment, etc.

Cypriniformes, Cyprinidae: golden shiner

Page 11: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Science, 27 July 2012, p. 409

Page 12: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Ears

equilibrium and balance:three semicircular canals detect roll, yaw, pitchalso acceleration

Page 13: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Ears

equilibrium and balance:three semicircular canals detect roll, yaw, pitchalso acceleration

semicircular canals

utriculus(lapillus)

pars superior(balance, acceleration)

Page 14: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Ears

sound receptionfish vibrates with sounds in water otoliths vibrate slower, impinge on sensory cilia

semicircular canals

utriculus(lapillus) lagena

(astericus)

sacculus(sagitta)

pars superior(balance, acceleration)

pars inferior(hearing)

Page 15: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Ears

equilibrium and balance:three semicircular canals detect roll, yaw, pitchalso acceleration

sound receptionfish vibrates with sounds in water otoliths vibrate slower, impinge on sensory cilia

Page 16: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Fig. 3. Schematic illustration of the relationship between the sensory epithelium and the overlying otolith

Page 17: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Ears

Otoliths

Page 18: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Ears

hearing sensitivity improved with1. Weberian apparatus

connects air bladder with ear labyrinthpresent in ostariophysan fishes

(Cypriniformes, Characiformes, Siluriformes)

gives wide range of hearing (20-7000 Hz)

Page 19: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Ears

hearing sensitivity improved with1. Weberian apparatus

connects air bladder with ear labyrinthpresent in ostariophysan fishesgives wide range of hearing (20-7000 Hz)

2. direct connection of swim bladder and ear squirrelfishes (Holocentridae)herrings etc. (Clupeidae)

Page 20: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Ears

hearing sensitivity improved with1. Weberian apparatus

connects air bladder with ear labyrinthpresent in ostariophysan fishesgives wide range of hearing (20-7000 Hz)

2. direct connection of swim bladder and ear 3. airbreathers maintain bubble in superbranchial cavity,

near to ear4. no connection - lower frequency range, lower response

to high frequencies

Page 21: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Sound production

homepage.univie.ac.at/friedrich.ladich/Topics.htm

http://www.fishecology.org/soniferous/waquoitposter.htm

Page 22: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Sound production

stridulation due to friction- grinding of teeth- movement of fin spine in socket, etc.

(catfish, triggerfish, filefish, sticklebacks)

Page 23: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Sound production

stridulation due to friction- grinding of teeth- movement of fin spine in socket, etc.

(catfish, triggerfish, filefish, sticklebacks)

via gas bladder- release of air

Page 24: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Sound production

stridulation due to friction- grinding of teeth- movement of fin spine in socket, etc.

(catfish, triggerfish, filefish, sticklebacks)

via gas bladder- release of air - vibration of muscles (toadfishes, Batrachoididae; searobins, Triglidae; drum, Sciaenidae)

Perciformes, Sciaenidae – freshwater drum)

Page 25: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Sound production

stridulation due to friction- grinding of teeth- movement of fin spine in socket, etc.

(catfish, triggerfish, filefish, sticklebacks)

via gas bladder- release of air - vibration of muscles

incidental to other behaviors- swimming and muscular motion- breaking surface and splashing- feeding, e.g., coral and crustacean-feeders- production of bubbles

Page 26: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Sound production

Technology for detection is rapidly advancingProvides data on presence, distribution, (density), behaviorRemote monitoring, nocturnal observations

Problems associated with human sound productionboat motorssonardredging, constructionnaval activities

Page 27: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Graham A L, Cooke S J. 2008 The effects of noise disturbance from various recreational boating activities common to inland waters on the cardiac physiology of a freshwater fish, the largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) Aquatic Conservation - Marine And Freshwater Ecosystems 18: 1315-1324    1.organism-level cardiovascular disturbance associated with different recreational boating activities using largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides).

2.Cardiac output (heart rate and stroke volume) monitored in real time as fish responses to canoe paddling, trolling motor, and combustion engine (9.9 hp)) for 60s.

3.Exposure to each of the treatments resulted in dramatic increase in heart rate and a slight decrease in stroke volume

canoe < trolling motor < combustion engine Time to recover:

canoe ~15 min, trolling motor ~ 25 min, combustion engine ~ 40 min

4.Fish experienced sublethal physiological disturbances in response to the noise from recreational boating activities. Boating activities can have ecological and environmental consequences; their use may not be compatible with aquatic protected areas.

Page 28: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Olfaction (= chemoreception at "long" range/gradients)

more sensitive than tasteused for:

food findingmigration, e.g., salmonintra, interspecific communication

Page 29: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Olfaction (= chemoreception at "long" range/gradients)

more sensitive than tasteused for:

food findingmigration, e.g., salmonintra, interspecific communication

“Schreckstoff” alarm pheromones (Ostariophysi)originate in specialized ‘club’ cells in skin,

released when fish is damaged- effect is to alert other conspecifics

potenthighly specific (generally species-specific)pass through gut of northern pike

Page 30: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Taste (= chemoreception at close range)

taste organs can reside on exterior surfaces:barbels of bottom-dwelling fisheslips of suckersover much of body of ictalurids

Page 31: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

use of taste and smell:•communication

•individual recognition, especially of mates

•species recognition, esp. schooling species

•offspring recognition (cichlids)

•scent mark territories (gobies)

•dominant-subordinate relationships

•aggression-inhibiting pheromone produced by bullheads

living in groups

Page 32: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Other cutaneous senses

temperatureteleost cutaneous temp. sensitivity to 0.03C changecan distinguish rise from a fall in temperatureelasmobranchs detect temperature change with

ampullae of Lorenzini

Page 33: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Other cutaneous senses

touchfew detectors – shark fins; head, barbels of bullheadsmating behaviors (use of breeding tubercules)parent-young communication in catfish, cichlids,

damselfishes

Page 34: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Electrogeneration and electroreception

Page 35: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc
Page 36: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

chum source

electrodes

Page 37: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Production of electricity

muscular contractions generate electrical signal‘stack’ specialized cells (electrocytes) to amplify signal(in series) with insulating material around them

Page 38: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Production of electricity

Types of electricity produced:strong current - for stunning prey or escaping predators10 to several hundred voltsin ‘volleys’ of discharges

Page 39: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Production of electricity

Types of electricity produced:strong current - for stunning prey or escaping predatorsweak current - for electrolocation

- conspecifics in school, - preyemit continuous signal; objects entering field are

detected by distortion of fielddischarge 200 - 1600 cycles/sec

Page 40: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Production of electricity

used by most elasmobranches, some teleosts

Osteoglossiformes (Mormyridae) - African electric fishes

Rajiiformes (Rajiidae) – electric skates

Gymnotiformes (Gymnotidae) – electric eels

Siluriformes (Malapteruridae) - electric catfish

Perciformes (Uranoscopidae) - stargazers

Torpediniformes (4 families) – electric rays

(Gymnarchidae)

strong-electric fishes weak-electric fishes

Page 41: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Production of electricity

electricity-producing fishes tend to beslow-moving, sedentaryactive at night, or in murky water w. low visibilityhave thick skin: good insulatoremhance signal-to-noise ratio with stiffened body

Page 42: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Electroreception

types of signals receivedmovement through earth’s magnetic fieldcurrent from muscular activity of other fish (prey)signals produced by conspecifics

frequency shifts identify individuals

Page 43: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Electroreception

detection via external pit organs ampullae of Lorenzini in elasmobranchesopen to surrounding water via canals, filled w. conductive gelsensitive to

temperature changemechanical and weak electrical stimulichanges in salinity

Page 44: Deep-seaDeep-sea lights Deep-sea fishesfishes Hearing, touch, taste, etc

Electroreception

detection via external pit organs

saltwater teleosts, elasmobranches – long, ~ 5- 160 mmskin has low resistancetissues have high resistance, relative to salt waterthus organs must penetrate skin to get voltage drop

in freshwater teleosts - quite short, ~300 micronstissues are good conductors relative to waterskin is highly resistive - so high voltage drop

across skin, detected w. shallow organ