Electric fish ignore their own zaps with a cool trick 
By Talia Ogliore-WUSTL CA Source: futurity 8/25/2020



African fish called mormyrids communicate using pulses of electricity. To distinguish their own signal from those of neighboring fish, their brains inhibit sensory responses using a corollary discharge, which is an internal copy of their own motor command. (Credit: Tsunehiko Kohashi)
Share this
Article

Facebook
Twitter
Email

You are free to share this article under the Attribution 4.0 International license.
Tags

brains
communication
electricity
fish

University
Washington University in St. Louis

New research clarifies how electric fish that use zaps to communicate block their own messages out and how the trick evolved.
 

These fish generate electric pulses to communicate with other fish and sense their surroundings. Some species broadcast shorter electric pulses, while others send out long ones. But all that zip-zapping in the water can get confusing.

The fish need to filter out their own pulses so they can identify external messages and only respond to those signals.

The solution to this problem is a brain function called a corollary discharge. It’s sort of like a negative copy of the original message—something that tells the fish, “Ignore this.”

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
5526Government of Canada takes action to address Fraser River Chinook declineFisheries and Oceans Canada2019-04-16CA
5527New Fisheries Act could mark a turning point for Canada’s depleted fisheriesHill Times2019-04-15CA
5528Estonia warns anglers off thin iceBBC Monitoring2019-03-19ES
5529Kenora based angler Jeff Gustafson joins BassmasterCBC News2019-02-07US
55302019 Lake Erie fishing outlook is great news for anglersOther News2019-04-12US
5531Atlantic mackerel stocks down 86% over past 20 years, says new DFO reportCBC News2019-04-10CA
5532Environment Canada approves genetically-modified salmon raised in P.E.I.THE CANADIAN PRESS2019-04-11CA
5533Governments of Canada and Nova Scotia fund projects to boost innovation and productivity in the fish and seafood sectorFisheries and Oceans Canada, Maritimes Region2019-04-10CA
5534Scientists are split on whether a virus is killing B.C.’s salmonStar Vancouver2019-04-06CA
5535Spring fish kill is natural phenomenonThe Associated Press2019-04-08UK
5536Small rebound for N.L.'s northern cod, but stock still in critical zoneThe Canadian Press 2019-04-02CA
5537Alberta guides encounter exceptional fishing, hospitality while filming documentary in OmanCTV Calgary 2019-03-14CA
5538Considerable number of Wascana Lake fish dead in apparent case of winterkillGlobal News2019-04-04CA
5539Fishing for fun, not food: Study takes stock of recreational fishing impactsYale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies2019-03-19CA
5540Lake Erie walleye quotas up but 'devastating' drop for perch, says commercial fisheryWindsor Star2019-04-02CA
5541Warming lakes affecting fish behaviour in Northwestern Ontariotbnewswatch.com2019-04-01CA
5542Wow! Man hooks 50-pound fish in small lake 2019-02-25US
5543Fraser River sturgeon decline prompts fishing closuresCBC News2019-03-31CA
5544New study helps track 'destructive' giant goldfish threatening Hamilton HarbourCBC News2019-03-29CA
5545Free hunting and fishing in Saskatchewan for Canadian Armed Forces veteransGlobal News2019-03-29CA
5546Blue-green algae confirmed on Nepahwin Lake, Windy Lake: environment ministryCBC News2016-11-01CA
5547Scientists found microplastics inside creatures from the deepest parts of the ocean Business Insider Deutschland2019-03-26DE
5548Yellowknife's Rainbow Coalition fish camp welcoming place to learn art of the catchCBC News2019-03-24CA
5549This cuckoo catfish tricks other fish into raising its head-chomping youngScience2019-03-22 
5550Bad news for Canadian fish: Fewer people are catching themottawa citizen2019-03-19CA

219 220 221 221 of [222 - pages.]