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      Passive Acoustics as a Tool in Fisheries Science

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      Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
      American Fisheries Society

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          Listening to Fish

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            The whistle and the rattle: the design of sound producing muscles.

            Vertebrate sound producing muscles often operate at frequencies exceeding 100 Hz, making them the fastest vertebrate muscles. Like other vertebrate muscle, these sonic muscles are "synchronous," necessitating that calcium be released and resequestered by the sarcoplasmic reticulum during each contraction cycle. Thus to operate at such high frequencies, vertebrate sonic muscles require extreme adaptations. We have found that to generate the "boatwhistle" mating call (approximately 200 Hz), the swimbladder muscle fibers of toadfish have evolved (i) a large and very fast calcium transient, (ii) a fast crossbridge detachment rate, and (iii) probably a fast kinetic off-rate of Ca2+ from troponin. The fibers of the shaker muscle of rattlesnakes have independently evolved similar traits, permitting tail rattling at approximately 90 Hz.
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              DELIMITING SPAWNING AREAS OF WEAKFISHCYNOSCION REGALIS(FAMILY SCIAENIDAE) IN PAMLICO SOUND, NORTH CAROLINA USING PASSIVE HYDROACOUSTIC SURVEYS

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
                Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
                American Fisheries Society
                0002-8487
                1548-8659
                February 2008
                February 2008
                : 137
                : 2
                : 533-541
                Article
                10.1577/T06-258.1
                dca75866-389d-4ffa-af64-4771341b754c
                © 2008
                History

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