Widespread sound communication among fish
Cornell
University
There's
a whole lot of talking going on beneath the waves. A new study from Cornell
University finds that fish are far more likely to communicate with sound than
generally thought -- and some fish have been doing this for at least 155
million years. These findings were just published in the journal Ichthyology
& Herpetology.Longspine squirrelfish
"We've
known for a long time that some fish make sounds," said
lead author Aaron Rice, a researcher at the K. Lisa Yang Center for
Conservation Bioacoustics at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. "But fish
sounds were always perceived as rare oddities. We wanted to know if these were
one-offs or if there was a broader pattern for acoustic communication in
fishes."
The authors looked at a branch of fishes called the ray-finned fishes. These are vertebrates (having a backbone) that comprise 99% of the world's known species of fishes. They found 175 families that contain two-thirds of fish species that do, or are likely to, communicate with sound. By examining the fish family tree, study authors found that sound was so important, it evolved at least 33 separate times over millions of years.
"Thanks
to decades of basic research on the evolutionary relationships of fishes, we
can now explore many questions about how different functions and behaviors
evolved in the approximately 35,000 known species of fishes," said co-author
William E. Bemis '76, Cornell professor of ecology and evolutionary biology in
the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. "We're getting away from a
strictly human-centric way of thinking. What we learn could give us some
insight on the drivers of sound communication and how it continues to
evolve."
The
scientists used three sources of information: existing recordings and
scientific papers describing fish sounds; the known anatomy of a fish --
whether they have the right tools for making sounds, such as certain bones, an
air bladder, and sound-specific muscles; and references in 19th century
literature before underwater microphones were invented.
"Sound
communication is often overlooked within fishes, yet they make up more than
half of all living vertebrate species," said Andrew Bass, co-lead author
and the Horace White Professor of Neurobiology and Behavior in the College of
Arts and Sciences. "They've probably been overlooked because fishes are
not easily heard or seen, and the science of underwater acoustic communication
has primarily focused on whales and dolphins. But fishes have voices,
too!"
What
are the fish talking about? Pretty much the same things we all talk about --
sex and food. Rice says the fish are either trying to attract a mate, defend a
food source or territory, or let others know where they are. Even some of the
common names for fish are based on the sounds they make, such as grunts,
croakers, hog fish, squeaking catfish, trumpeters, and many more.
Rice
intends to keep tracking the discovery of sound in fish species and add them to
his growing database (see supplemental material, Table S1) -- a project he
began 20 years ago with study co-authors Ingrid Kaatz '85, MS '92, and Philip
Lobel, a professor of biology at Boston University. Their collaboration has
continued and expanded since Rice came to Cornell.
"This
introduces sound communication to so many more groups than we ever
thought," said Rice. "Fish do everything. They breathe air, they fly,
they eat anything and everything -- at this point, nothing would surprise me
about fishes and the sounds that they can make."
The
research was partly funded by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Bureau
of Ocean Energy Management, the Tontogany Creek Fund, and the Cornell Lab of
Ornithology.