Thursday 3 November 2011

Flesh-Tearing Piranhas Communicate With Sound

60-Second Science | More Science

Red-bellied piranhas make three distinctive sounds when communicating about how much they will mess each other up. Cynthia Graber reports.

More 60-Second Science

Like a pit bull, piranhas will tear the flesh from your bones. Also like a pit bull, they bark. [Piranha audio type 1] Kind of.

Scientists had known that piranha barked when you pick them up ? carefully, of course. But they hadn?t known what these sounds were for. So researchers examined how the vocalizations might correspond with behavior.

They dropped a microphone into a piranha tank that, at different times, held three groups of 10 fish. They then placed a mussel in to see how the fish competed for food.

When the fish faced off, they produced that percussive bark. [Piranha audio type 1]

When they circled one another, they made a softer thud sound. [Piranha audio type 2]

A teeth gnashing [Piranha audio type 3] indicated that a piranha was getting pretty ticked off as it chased a competitor.

The first two sounds are produced by muscles contracting around the fish?s swim bladder. The findings are in the Journal of Experimental Biology. [Sandie Millot, Pierre Vandewalle and Eric Parmentier, Sound production in red-bellied piranhas (Pygocentrus nattereri, Kner): an acoustical, behavioural and morphofunctional study. Piranha audio courtesy of Sandie Millot]

The researchers are now interested in whether piranhas vocalize during mating. But they?ll have to travel to Brazil to study this in the wild ? turns out that when it comes to mating in captivity, piranhas say no tanks.

?Cynthia Graber

[The above text is a transcript of this podcast]


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