Electric organ discharges and near-field spatiotemporal patterns of the electromotive force in a sympatric assemblage of Neotropical electric knifefish

J Physiol Paris. 2016 Oct;110(3 Pt B):164-181. doi: 10.1016/j.jphysparis.2016.10.004. Epub 2016 Oct 26.

Abstract

Descriptions of the head-to-tail electric organ discharge (ht-EOD) waveform - typically recorded with electrodes at a distance of approximately 1-2 body lengths from the center of the subject - have traditionally been used to characterize species diversity in gymnotiform electric fish. However, even taxa with relatively simple ht-EODs show spatiotemporally complex fields near the body surface that are determined by site-specific electrogenic properties of the electric organ and electric filtering properties of adjacent tissues and skin. In Brachyhypopomus, a pulse-discharging genus in the family Hypopomidae, the regional characteristics of the electric organ and the role that the complex 'near field' plays in communication and/or electrolocation are not well known. Here we describe, compare, and discuss the functional significance of diversity in the ht-EOD waveforms and near-field spatiotemporal patterns of the electromotive force (emf-EODs) among a species-rich sympatric community of Brachyhypopomus from the upper Amazon.

Keywords: Amazon; Brachyhypopomus; Cloaking; Communication; Electric organ; Electrogenesis; Electroreception; Gymnotiform; Hypopomidae.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Electric Organ / physiology*
  • Electromagnetic Phenomena*
  • Gymnotiformes / physiology*
  • Rivers
  • Tropical Climate