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Article
Chirping response of weakly electric knife fish (Apteronotus leptorhynchus) to low-frequency electric signals and to heterospecific electric fish
The Journal of Experimental Biology (2010)
  • K. D. Dunlap, Trinity College, Hartford Connecticut
  • Brett DiBenedictis, Sacred Heart University
  • S. R. Banever, Trinity College, Hartford Connecticut
Abstract
Brown ghost knife fish (Apteronotus leptorhynchus) can briefly increase their electric organ discharge (EOD) frequency to produce electrocommunication signals termed chirps. The chirp rate increases when fish are presented with conspecific fish or high-frequency (700–1100Hz) electric signals that mimic conspecific fish. We examined whether A. leptorhynchus also chirps in response to artificial low-frequency electric signals and to heterospecific electric fish whose EOD contains low-frequency components. Fish chirped at rates above background when presented with low-frequency (10–300Hz) sine-wave stimuli; at 30 and 150Hz, the threshold amplitude for response was 1mVcm–1. Low-frequency (30Hz) stimuli also potentiated the chirp response to high-frequency (~900Hz) stimuli. Fish increased their chirp rate when presented with two heterospecific electric fish, Sternopygus macrurus and Brachyhypopomus gauderio, but did not respond to the presence of the non-electric fish Carassius auratus. Fish chirped to low-frequency (150Hz) signals that mimic those of S. macrurus and to EOD playbacks of B. gauderio. The response to the B. gauderio playback was reduced when the low-frequency component (<150Hz) was experimentally filtered out. Thus, A. leptorhynchus appears to chirp specifically to the electric signals of heterospecific electric fish, and the low-frequency components of heterospecific EODs significantly influence chirp rate. These results raise the possibility that chirps function to communicate to conspecifics about the presence of a heterospecific fish or to communicate directly to heterospecific fish.
Keywords
  • electrocommunication,
  • electric fish,
  • Apteronotus,
  • electroreception,
  • interspecific communication
Publication Date
2010
DOI
10.1242/jeb.038653
Citation Information
Dunlap KD, DiBenedictis BT, Banever SR. Chirping response of weakly electric knife fish (Apteronotus leptorhynchus) to low-frequency electric signals and to heterospecific electric fish. J Exp Biol. 2010 Jul 1;213(Pt 13):2234-42. doi: 10.1242/jeb.038653. PMID: 20543122.