A male Danionella cerebrum fish Ralf Britz/Senckenberg Dresden
One of the world鈥檚 smallest fish, measuring just 12 millimetres long, can make a sound registering more than 140 decibels 鈥 about as loud as firecrackers being set off.
Danionella cerebrum is a tiny species of fish that is native to small streams along the Bago Yoma mountain range in Myanmar. It has the of any vertebrate in the world.
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鈥淲e study this fish primarily for neuroscience, because they鈥檙e so small and transparent,鈥 says at Charit茅 鈥 Berlin University Medicine in Germany. But the fish are so loud that, even when just walking past their tanks, you can hear audible pulsing sounds, she says.
To investigate how the tiny fish make these sounds, Cook and her colleagues gathered groups of three or four fish into a small tank and took high-speed videos of them.
When the fish produce sound, the rib that sits adjacent to their swim bladder 鈥 the organ that helps to control their buoyancy 鈥 gets pulled by a specialised muscle into a piece of cartilage with a small indentation.
鈥淭here鈥檚 tension built up in this contraction,鈥 says Cook. 鈥淲hen that is very rapidly released, [the cartilage] strikes the swim bladder, which produces the drumming sound.鈥
Based on analysis of gene expression, these specialised muscles are more resilient to fatigue compared with other muscles in the fish, which allows them to produce lots of hits in quick succession.
The reason why these fish make such a loud noise is unclear. D. cerebrum normally live in murky, turbid waters, so they might have evolved this behaviour to help locate each other when visibility is poor, says Cook.
鈥淏ut the fact that it鈥檚 only males that make sound suggests that it鈥檚 to do with aggressive behaviour towards other males or mating behaviour with females,鈥 she says.
Journal reference:
PNAS
Article amended on 29 February 2024
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