Sound production mechanism in carapid fish: first example with a slow sonic muscle

Fish sonic swimbladder muscles are the fastest muscles in vertebrates and have fibers with numerous biochemical and structural adaptations for speed. Carapid fishes produce sounds with a complex swimbladder mechanism, including skeletal components and extrinsic sonic muscle fibers with an exceptiona...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of experimental biology Vol. 209; no. Pt 15; pp. 2952 - 2960
Main Authors Parmentier, Eric, Lagardère, Jean-Paul, Braquegnier, Jean-Baptiste, Vandewalle, Pierre, Fine, Michael L
Format Journal Article Web Resource
LanguageEnglish
Published England Company Of Biologists Ltd 01.08.2006
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Summary:Fish sonic swimbladder muscles are the fastest muscles in vertebrates and have fibers with numerous biochemical and structural adaptations for speed. Carapid fishes produce sounds with a complex swimbladder mechanism, including skeletal components and extrinsic sonic muscle fibers with an exceptional helical myofibrillar structure. To study this system we stimulated the sonic muscles, described their insertion and action and generated sounds by slowly pulling the sonic muscles. We find the sonic muscles contract slowly, pulling the anterior bladder and thereby stretching a thin fenestra. Sound is generated when the tension trips a release system that causes the fenestra to snap back to its resting position. The sound frequency does not correspond to the calculated resonant frequency of the bladder, and we hypothesize that it is determined by the snapping fenestra interacting with an overlying bony swimbladder plate. To our knowledge this tension release mechanism is unique in animal sound generation.
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scopus-id:2-s2.0-33748419607
ISSN:0022-0949
1477-9145
1477-9145
DOI:10.1242/jeb.02350