Publication | Closed Access
Detection of Intense Ultrasound by the Cod <i>Gadus Morhua</i>
65
Citations
13
References
1993
Year
Biomedical AcousticsMedical UltrasoundEngineeringUnderwater Acoustic CommunicationDiagnosisBiological Effects Of Acoustic WavesAcoustical OceanographyUnderwater AcousticOcean AcousticsFishing FleetUltrasound PhysicsRadiologyMarine UltrasoundOcean InstrumentationMedical ImagingUltrasonicsMedicineAcoustic PropagationIntense UltrasoundUltrasoundBioacousticsVeterinary ScienceOcean AcousticMarine BiologyUnderwater SensingIntense 38Khz
ABSTRACT The ability of cod to detect intense 38kHz pulses was studied in an anechoic tank, using a classical cardiac conditioning method. All 15 cod studied reacted to 3ms pulses. The average threshold was 194.4dB re 1μPa (S.D. 5.4dB, S.E.M. 0.3dB). The data do not reveal the sensory modality involved. A number of additional experiments indicate that the ultrasonic energy per se is the effective stimulus. The threshold is too high for most sources of marine ultrasound to be detected, but is low enough to allow the cod to detect echolocating odontocetes at a range of 10–30m. The results also indicate that cod can detect echo-sounders of the fishing fleet at similar ranges.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1