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Fast pressure pulses and communication between fish

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

J. A. B. Gray
Affiliation:
Marine Biological Association, The Laboratory, Citadel Hill, Plymouth, PL PB
E. J. Denton
Affiliation:
Marine Biological Association, The Laboratory, Citadel Hill, Plymouth, PL PB

Extract

Experiments on herring (Clupea harengus L.), sprat (Sprattus sprattus (L.)) and whiting (Merlangius merlangus (L.)) showed that when these fish make rapid swimming movements, such movements are preceded by fast pressure pulses in the surrounding sea water. Thefirst (a) phases of these pulses had durations of from 1–5 to 3–5 ms. The pulses could be excited in free-swimming fish by both visual and auditory stimuli and the latencies to the latter ranged from 5 to 8–5 ms. Identical pulses could be elicited by giving electrical stimuli to anaesthetized fish; these pulses had latencies from 34 to 7 ms.

The pressure fields around the fish were measured on suspended anaesthetized fish stimulated electrically. At any instant the fields of the fast pulses produced by whiting had the same polarity at all positions round the fish and pressure decayed inversely with the 1–5 powerof distance. The a phase of the fast pulse was usually a decompression.

The fields around a stimulated herring were different. The pressures on both sides oppositethe centre of the fish were of one polarity while those around the head and the tail were of the opposite polarity, the pattern of pressure being symmetrical about the long axis of the fish.In our experiments the a phase opposite the centre of the fish was always a compression. The amplitudes of these pulses declined with distance by the power of 2–5. In all species in our experiments the fast pulses were followed by slower pulses associated with swimming movements; these slower pulses had opposite polarities at corresponding points on the two sides of the fish.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1991

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