scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuroethology and life history adaptations of the elasmobranch electric sense.

TLDR
It is argued that the ontogenetic and seasonal variation in electrosensory tuning represent an adaptive electrosENSory plasticity that may be common to many elasmobranchs to enhance an individual's fitness throughout its life history.
Abstract
The electric sense of elasmobranch fishes (sharks and rays) is an important sensory modality known to mediate the detection of bioelectric stimuli. Although the best known function for the use of the elasmobranch electric sense is prey detection, relatively few studies have investigated other possible biological functions. Here, we review recent studies that demonstrate the elasmobranch electrosensory system functions in a wide number of behavioral contexts including social, reproductive and anti-predator behaviors. Recent work on non-electrogenic stingrays demonstrates that the electric sense is used during reproduction and courtship for conspecific detection and localization. Electrogenic skates may use their electrosensory encoding capabilities and electric organ discharges for communication during social and reproductive interactions. The electric sense may also be used to detect and avoid predators during early life history stages in many elasmobranch species. Embryonic clearnose skates demonstrate a ventilatory freeze response when a weak low-frequency electric field is imposed upon the egg capsule. Peak frequency sensitivity of the peripheral electrosensory system in embryonic skates matches the low frequencies of phasic electric stimuli produced by natural fish egg-predators. Neurophysiology experiments reveal that electrosensory tuning changes across the life history of a species and also seasonally due to steroid hormone changes during the reproductive season. We argue that the ontogenetic and seasonal variation in electrosensory tuning represent an adaptive electrosensory plasticity that may be common to many elasmobranchs to enhance an individual's fitness throughout its life history.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Dissertation

Models of Causal Inference in the Elasmobranch Electrosensory System: How Sharks Find Food

Kiri Pullar
TL;DR: The elasmobranchs’ ability to sense electric fields down to a limit imposed by thermodynamics seems extraordinary, but it is predicted that the theories presented here generalize to other sensory systems, particularly the other octavolateralis senses which share cerebellar-like circuitry.
Dissertation

The potential impacts of submarine power cables on benthic elasmobranchs

Melanie Orr
TL;DR: Acknowledgements and acknowledgements are given in Table of Table of Contents as discussed by the authors, Section 5.1.1, Section 6.2, Section 7.2.3.
Journal ArticleDOI

High resolution biologging of breaching by the world's second largest shark species.

TL;DR: In this paper, the first direct records of breaching by basking sharks over 41 days were presented, starting at approximately 20m depth and can breach multiple times in short succession, and they also showed early evidence of potential lateralisation.
Book ChapterDOI

Evolution and physiology of electroreceptors and electric organs in Neotropical fish

TL;DR: Under a phylogenetic hypothesis, it is possible to deduce the multiple “inventions” of both electroreceptors and EOs in fish.

Visual specializations and light detection in Chondrichthyes

TL;DR: This document summarizes current capabilities, research and operational priorities, and plans for further studies that were established at the 2015 USGS workshop on quantitative hazard assessments of earthquake-triggered landsliding and liquefaction in the Central American region.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Handbook of Sensory Physiology

Journal Article

Fish Bulletin 157. Guide To The Coastal Marine Fishes of California

TL;DR: This is a comprehensive identification guide encompassing all shallow marine fishes within California waters, and many of the family keys have been revised to incorporate recent taxonomic changes and to clarify previously ambiguous terminology.
BookDOI

Sensory biology of aquatic animals

TL;DR: This volume constitutes a series of invited chapters based on presentations given at an International Conference on the Sensory Biology of Aquatic Animals held June 24-28, 1985 at the Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, Florida.
Related Papers (5)