CK
Member (Idle past 4158 days) Posts: 3221 Joined: 07-04-2004
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Message 1 of 5 (317302)
06-03-2006 5:59 PM
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quote: Electric fish emit weak signals from an organ in their tails that serves as a battery. Different emissions signal aggression, fear or courtship. While the fish can apparently understand each others' warning signals, "They seem to only choose to mate with other fish having the same signature waveform as their own," explains neurobiologist Matt Arnegard of Cornell University. But in the Ivindo River in Gabon, Arnegard and colleagues have found fish with the same DNA emitting distinctly different signals. The fish are likely on the verge of splitting into two species, the researchers announced today. "We think we are seeing evolution in action," Arnegard said. Electric animals Because electricity is easily transmitted in water, many species of amphibians and fish have adapted to detect weak electric signals. Some, like sharks, use it to find prey. Others, like the electric eel, generate deadly voltages for defense or to kill prey. Others emit and detect electrical signals primarily as a means to communicate with their own kind.
http://news.yahoo.com/...ctricfishonvergeofevolutionarysplit
Replies to this message: | | Message 2 by Damouse, posted 06-03-2006 6:50 PM | | CK has not replied |
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