Title: What is a Fish?
1Sensory Perception
Vision Olfaction Hearing mechanoreception Electr
oreception Magnetoreception
2Senses
Physical Quantity Sense Organ
Sound Ears
Water flow Lateral line
Chemicals Taste Buds/Nose
Electricity Ampullae of Lorenzini
Magnetic Fields Nose ????
Light Eyes
3Acoustico Lateralis System
- Equilibrium
- Hearing
- Mechanoreception
Hair sensory cells
4Sensory Hair Cells
5Hearing in Fishes
- Fish have ears
- Otoliths detect particle motion
- Swimbladder can act as pressure transducer
6What is Sound?
- Sound is a mechanical vibration that propagates
through an elastic medium such as air or water. - Sound travels as waves of oscillating particles
accompanied by increases and decreases in the
ambient pressure. - Sound propagates along the axis of particle
vibration.
7Ear Morphology
8Fish hearing is generally low-frequency
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10Cyprinidae
11American Shad Audiogram
12Ultrasonic detection by american shad.
Classical Conditioning Example of cardiac
response followed by electric shock
13Ultrasonic sound detection by American
Shad Auditory Brain Response
14Sound Production
Swimbladder of the toadfish, Opsanus sp. Sonic
muscles can be seen on the lateral walls.
Batrachoididae Oyster toadfish Opsanus tau
15Ecology of Sound Production
Sound produced by spawning aggregation of
sciaenids
16Lateral Line
Neuromasts groups of hair cell w/gelatinous
cupule
17Hydrodynamic Stimuli
- Water currents from flows (rheotaxis)
- Schooling/predator avoidance
- Active hydrodynamic imaging
- Passive hydrodynamic imaging
- Courtship
- Subsurface feeding
18Flows produced by organisms
19Lateral line shapes
20Electroreception
Elasmobranchs Teleosts Low frecuency AC - DC
Teleosts High frequency AC
21Electroreceptors
22Ampullae de Lorenzini
Dogfish can detect a flounder buried 15 cm deep
(1 mV/Km)
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25Electrical fishes
26Electric Organ Discharge (EOD)
- Modified muscle cells to create EOD
27Brachyhypopomus spp. EOD
28Magnetoreception
- Elasmobranchs
- Hammerhead shark schools
- Laboratory experiments with rays
- Teleosts
- Magnetite found in Salmon and Tuna
29Magnetoreception
30Induced Electric Field
- Currents in ocean flowing through earths
magnetic field generate currents from lt5 nV/cm to
500 nV/cm. - Suspected that eels use these currents, but not
clear if they are sensitive enough to electrical
fields. - Stingrays can sense fields as low as 5 nV.cm
31At ambient magnetic field of 0.5 gauss, a
swimming speed of 1 cm/s would produce a
threshold stimulus of 5 nV/cm. This has yet to be
proven.
32Magnetite in Nose (Trout)
- Bacteria containing magnetite (not from the
trout). - Olfactory epithelium. Red dot with arrow is
putative magnetite. - Bright field (left) and dark field (right) TEM of
dot from b. - Energy dispersive analysis of x-rays from
crystal. Shows presence of iron (Cu is from
copper screen, Pb and U from TEM stains).
Walker, Diebel, Haugh, Pankhurst, Montgomery,
Green. 1997. Structure and function of the
vertebrate magnetic sense. Nature. 390 371-376.
33Olfaction
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36Taste Buds
37Vision
38Photoreceptor cells
- Rods
- Sensitive at low light levels
- Present in all fishes
- Cones
- Sensitive at high light intensity
- Some elasmobranchs and most fishes
- Red cones (600nm)
- Green cones (530nm)
- Blue cones (460nm)
- Ultraviolet cones (380nm)
39Electromagnetic Wavelengths
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41Rod maximum absorption
42Visual Acuity
Determined by eye aperture and photoreceptor
density. Acuity increases as size increases.