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Morphological diversity of acoustic and electric communication systems of mochokid catfish
- Source :
- The Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2020.
-
Abstract
- Mochokid catfish offer a distinct opportunity to study a communication system transitioning to a new signaling channel because some produce sounds and others electric discharges. Both signals are generated using an elastic spring system (ESS), which includes a protractor muscle innervated by motoneurons within the protractor nucleus that also has a motoneuron afferent population. Synodontis grandiops and S. nigriventris produce sounds and electric discharges, respectively, and their ESSs show several morphological and physiological differences. The extent to which these differences explain different signal types remains unclear. Here, we compare ESS morphologies and behavioral phenotypes among five mochokids. S. grandiops and S. nigriventris were compared with Synodontis eupterus that is known to produce both signal types, and representative members of two sister genera, Microsynodontis cf. batesii and Mochokiella paynei, for which no data were available. We provide support for the hypothesis that peripheral and central components of the ESS are conserved among mochokids. We also show that the two nonsynodontids are only sonic, consistent with sound production being an ancestral character for mochokids. Even though the three sound producing‐only species differ in some ESS characters, several are similar and likely associated with only sound production. We propose that the ability of S. eupterus to generate both electric discharges and sounds may depend on a protractor muscle intermediate in morphology between sound producing‐only and electric discharge‐only species, and two separate populations of protractor motoneurons. Our results further suggest that an electrogenic ESS in synodontids is an exaptation of a sound producing ESS.<br />This study provides an anatomical characterization of motor and premotor neurons associated with the muscle producing swim bladder sounds and/or electric discharges in five mochokid catfish. Even though the same muscle and neuronal populations are associated with these behaviors across all species, our results suggest that behavioral differences are associated with quantitative differences, mainly in the size of the protractor muscle and associated skeletal elements, and the number, size and location of motoneurons.
- Subjects :
- Population
Biology
Communications system
electric fish
Species Specificity
Synodontis
evolution
Animals
Neurons, Afferent
Protractor
education
Electric fish
Research Articles
Catfishes
Motor Neurons
education.field_of_study
Electric Organ
General Neuroscience
Exaptation
neural pathways
biology.organism_classification
Synodontis grandiops
animal vocalizations
Animal Communication
Evolutionary biology
comparative anatomy
Catfish
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 10969861 and 00219967
- Volume :
- 529
- Issue :
- 8
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6961df0588d14c97d153f33b8ffcd5df