Robotic Applications Eyed As Scientists Decode Mathematics Behind Fish's Lateral-line System 
CA Source: underwatertimes 8/28/2009

Fish and some amphibians possess a unique sensory capability in the so-called lateral-line system. It allows them, in effect, to "touch" objects in their surroundings without direct physical contact or to "see" in the dark. Professor Leo van Hermmen and his team in the physics department of the Technische Universitaet Muenchen are exploring the fundamental basis for this sensory system. What they discover might one day, through biomimetic engineering, better equip robots to orient themselves in their environments.

With our senses we take in only a small fraction of the information that surrounds us. Infrared light, electromagnetic waves, and ultrasound are just a few examples of the external influences that we humans can grasp only with the help of technological measuring devices – whereas some other animals use special sense organs, their own biological equipment, for the purpose. One such system found in fish and some amphibians is under investigation by the research team of Professor Leo van Hemmen, chair of theoretical biophysics at TUM, the Technische Universitaet Muenchen.
 

Even in murky waters hardly penetrated by light, pike and pickerel can feel out their prey before making contact. The blind Mexican cave fish can perceive structures in its surroundings and can effortlessly avoid obstacles. Catfish on the hunt follow invisible tracks that lead directly to their prey. The organ that makes this possible is the lateral-line system, which registers changes in currents and even smaller disturbances, providing backup support for the sense of sight particularly in dark or muddy waters.

This remote sensing system, at first glance mysterious, rests on measurement of the pressure distribution and velocity field in the surrounding water. The lateral-line organs responsible for this are aligned along the left and right sides of the fish's body and also surround the eyes and mouth. They consist of gelatinous, flexible, flag-like units about a tenth of a millimeter long. These so-called neuromasts – which sit either directly on the animal's skin or just underneath, in channels that water can permeate through pores – are sensitive to the slightest motion of the water. Coupled to them are hair cells similar to the acoustic pressure sensors in the human inner ear. Nerves deliver signals from the hair cells for processing in the brain, which localizes and identifies possible sources of the changes detected in the water's motion.

These changes can arise from various sources: A fish swimming by produces vibrations or waves that are directly conveyed to the lateral-line organ. Schooling fishes can recognize a nearby attacker and synchronize their swimming motion so that they resemble a single large animal. The Mexican cave fish pushes a bow wave ahead of itself, which is reflected from obstacles. The catfish takes advantage of the fact that a swimming fish that beats its tail fin leaves a trail of eddies behind. This so-called "vortex street" persists for more than a minute and can betray the prey.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
526It Was Raining Fish In Iran; No, We Are Not Jokingnews182024-05-06IR
527Massive 165kg tuna caught off Victorian coast9news2024-05-09AU
528В ожидании ходаohotniki2024-05-05RU
529Пропавшая в 19-м веке акула-ангел появилась в рыбацких сетях в Чилиrg2024-04-27CL
530More than 2,300 fish killed off at Hyde Creek Hatchery in Port Coquitlammsn2024-05-08CA
531Drought signs raise fears of another fish die-off in B.C. riversCBC News2024-05-08CA
532Minnows plentiful, license sales up: It’s time to fishechopress2024-05-08US
533As plastic talks wrap up in Canadamongabay2024-05-08ID
534В проводку по «рыжей» водеohotniki2024-04-30RU
535Online training launched for Chinese grass carp farmersthefishsite2024-05-08CN
536Ohio teens state fishing record officially certified after 101-pound blue catfish catchFox News2024-05-08US
537Former CFL star Brad Sinopoli tackling new waters as full-time fishing guidebrandonsun2024-05-07CA
538Благословенные апрельские рыбалкиohotniki2024-04-29RU
539Fisherman hooks prehistoric 200-pound alligatorFox News2024-05-04US
540Angler breaks 43-year-old record after reeling in large perch in Lake MichiganFOX 13 News2024-05-07US
541Poachers nailed after hiding fish in strange placesfoxnews2024-05-04US
542Tuna fishing season using a technique thousands of years old opens in Spain with some of those landed on first daysurinenglish2024-04-19SP
543Filipino fishermen blame sand mining for declining catchbworldonline2024-04-21PH
544Warming seas push Indias fishers into distant, and more dangerous, watersmongabay2024-04-23IN
545Douglas County man arrested after thousands of hatchery fish poisonedkobi52024-04-25US
546Navigating the rise in conflicts between humans and fishing cats in Bangladeshmongabay2024-04-25BD
547How local fishermen found a group of blackfin tuna while fishing in Gulf of MexicoBradenton Herald2024-04-21US
548Unlike Earnest Hemingway's epic tale "The Old Man and the Sea," the sharks did not come along and eat the giant. Though, after Asbury Park Press2024-04-22US
549117 operations to tackle fish bombing in Sabah since 2021nst2024-04-24MY
550Woman catches 30-pound koi fish in Texas lakeklfy2024-04-26US

217 218 219 21 of [220 - pages.]