Skip to main content
Log in

Behavioral detection of electric signal waveform distortion in the weakly electric fish, Gnathonemus petersii

  • Original Paper
  • Published:
Journal of Comparative Physiology A Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

The “novelty response” of weakly electric mormyrids is a transient acceleration of the rate of electric organ discharges (EOD) elicited by a change in stimulus input. In this study, we used it as a tool to test whether Gnathonemus petersii can perceive minute waveform distortions of its EOD that are caused by capacitive objects, as would occur during electrolocation. Four predictions of a hypothesis concerning the mechanism of capacitance detection were tested and confirmed: (1) G. petersii exhibited a strong novelty response to computer-generated (synthetic) electric stimuli that mimic both the waveform and frequency shifts of the EOD caused by natural capacitive objects (Fig. 3). (2) Similar responses were elicited by synthetic stimuli in which only the waveform distortion due to phase shifting the EOD frequency components was present (Fig. 4). (3) Novelty responses could reliably be evoked by a constant amplitude phase shifted EOD that effects the entire body of the fish evenly, i.e., a phase difference across the body surface was lacking (Figs. 3, 4). (4) Local presentation of a phase-shifted EOD mimic that stimulated only a small number of electroreceptor organs at a single location was also effective in eliciting a behavioral response (Fig. 5).

Our results indicate that waveform distortions due to phase shifts alone, i.e. independent of amplitude or frequency cues, are sufficient for the detection of capacitive, animate objects. Mormyrids perceive even minute waveform changes of their own EODs by centrally comparing the input of the two types of receptor cells within a single mormyromast electroreceptor organ. Thus, no comparison of differentially affected body regions is necessary. This shows that G. petersii indeed uses a unique mechanism for signal analysis, which is different from the one employed by gymnotiform wavefish.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Institutional subscriptions

Similar content being viewed by others

Abbreviations

EOD :

electric organ discharge

p-p-amplitude :

peak-to-peak amplitude

References

  • Bastian J (1990) Electroreception. In: Stebbins WC, Berkeley MH (eds) Complex signals. (Comparative perception, vol II) Wiley, New York, pp 35–89

    Google Scholar 

  • Bell CC (1989) Sensory coding and corollary discharge effects in mormyrid electric fish. J Exp Biol 146: 229–253

    Google Scholar 

  • Bell CC (1990) Mormyromast electroreceptor organs and their afferent fibers in mormyrid fish. III. Physiological differences between two morphological types of fibers. J Neurophysiol 63: 319–332

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Bell CC, Zakon H, Finger TE (1989) Mormyromast electroreceptor organs and their afferent fibers in mormyrid fish. I. Morphology. J Comp Neurol 286: 391–407

    Google Scholar 

  • Bennett, MVL (1965) Electroreceptors in mormyrids. Cold Spring Harbor Symp Quant Biol 30: 245–262

    Google Scholar 

  • Carr C, Heiligenberg W, Rose GJ (1986) A time-comparison circuit in the electric fish midbrain. I. Behavior and physiology. J Neurosci 6: 107–119

    Google Scholar 

  • Emde G von der (1990) Discrimination of objects through electrolocation in the weakly electric fish, Gnathonemus petersii. J Comp Physiol A 167: 413–421

    Google Scholar 

  • Emde G von der (1992) Electrolocation of capacitive objects in four species of pulse-type weakly electric fish. II. Electric signalling behaviour. Ethology 92: 177–192

    Google Scholar 

  • Emde G von der (1993) The sensing of electrical capacitances by weakly electric mormyrid fish: effects of water conductivity. J Exp Biol 181: 157–173

    Google Scholar 

  • Emde G von der, Bell CC (1994) Responses of cells in the mormyrid electrosensory lobe to EODs with distorted waveforms: implications for capacitance detection. J Comp Physiol A 175: 83–93

    Google Scholar 

  • Emde G von der, Bleckmann H (1992) Differential coding of naturally occurring signal distortions by two types of electroreceptive afférents in the weakly electric fish, Gnathonemus petersii. J Comp Physiol A 171: 683–694

    Google Scholar 

  • Emde G von der, Ringer T (1992) Electrolocation of capacitive objects in four species of pulse-type weakly electric fish. I. Discrimination performance. Ethology 91: 326–338

    Google Scholar 

  • Emde G von der, Ronacher B (1994) Perception of electric properties of objects in electrolocating weakly electric fish: two-dimensional similarity scaling reveals a City-Block metric. J Comp Physiol A 175: 801–812

    Google Scholar 

  • Hall C, Bell CC, Zelick R (1995) Behavioral evidence of a latency code for stimulus intensity in mormyrid electric fish. J Comp Physiol A 177: 29–39

    Google Scholar 

  • Harder W, Schief A, Uhlemann H (1967) Zur Empfindlichkeit des schwachelektrischen Fisches Gnathonemus petersii (Gthr. 1862) (Mormyriformes, Teleostei) gegenüber elektrischen Feldern. Z Vergl Physiol 54: 89–108

    Google Scholar 

  • Heiligenberg W (1975) Theoretical and experimental approaches to spatial aspects of electrolocation. J Comp Physiol 103: 247–272

    Google Scholar 

  • Heiligenberg W (1991) Neural nets in electric fish. MIT Press, Cambridge

    Google Scholar 

  • Heiligenberg W, Altes RA (1978) Phase sensitivity in electroreception. Science 199: 1001–1004

    Google Scholar 

  • Heiligenberg W, Rose GJ (1985) Phase and amplitude computations in the midbrain of an electric fish: intracellular studies of neurons participating in the jamming avoidance response of Eigenmannia. J Neurosci 5: 515–531

    Google Scholar 

  • Hopkins CD (1988) Neuroethology of electric communication. Annu Rev Neurosci 11: 497–533

    Google Scholar 

  • Hopkins CD, Bass AH (1981) Temporal coding of species recognition signals in an electric fish. Science 212: 85–87

    Google Scholar 

  • Kawasaki M (1993) Independently evolved jamming avoidance responses employ identical computational algorithms: a behavioral study of the African electric fish, Gymnarchus niloticus. J Comp Physiol A 173: 9–22

    Google Scholar 

  • Kramer B (1990) Electrocommunication in teleost fishes: behavior and experiments. Springer, Berlin

    Google Scholar 

  • Kramer B, Tautz J, Markl H (1981) The EOD sound response in weakly electric fish. J Comp Physiol 143: 435–441

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Lissmann H (1958) On the function and evolution of electric organs in fish. J Exp Biol 35: 156–191

    Google Scholar 

  • Meyer JH (1982) Behavioral responses of weakly electric fish to complex impedances. J Comp Physiol 145: 459–470

    Google Scholar 

  • Moller P (1970) ‘Communication’ in weakly electric fish, Gnathonemus niger (Mormyridae). I. Variation of electric organ discharge (EOD) frequency elicited by controlled electric stimuli. Anim Behav 18: 768–786

    Google Scholar 

  • Rose G, Heiligenberg W (1986) Neural coding of difference frequencies in the midbrain of the electric fish Eigenmannia: Reading the sense of rotation in an amplitude-phase plane. J Comp Physiol A 158: 613–624

    Google Scholar 

  • Scheich H, Bullock TH (1974) The detection of electric fields from electric organs. In: Fessard A (ed) Electroreceptors and other specialized receptors in lower vertebrates (Handbook of sensory physiology, vol III/3). Springer, Berlin Heildelberg New York, pp 201–256

    Google Scholar 

  • Scheich H, Bullock TH, Hamstra RH Jr (1973) Coding properties of two classes of afferent nerve fibers: high frequency receptors in the electric fish, Eigenmannia. J Neurophysiol 36: 39–60

    Google Scholar 

  • Szabo T, Fessard A (1963) Le fonctionnement des électrorecepteurs étudié chez le mormyres. J Physiol (Paris) 57: 343–360

    Google Scholar 

  • Szabo T, Hagiwara S (1967) A latency change mechanism involved in sensory coding of electric fish (mormyrids). Physiol BehUltrastructure of an electroreceptor (Mormyromast) in a mormyrid Fish, Gnathonemus petersii. II. Ultrastructure Res 30: 473–490

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

von der Emde, G., Zelick, R. Behavioral detection of electric signal waveform distortion in the weakly electric fish, Gnathonemus petersii . J Comp Physiol A 177, 493–501 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00187484

Download citation

  • Accepted:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00187484

Key words

Navigation