This study explores the morphology and electrical behavior of breeding weakly electric fish. Wave-type electric fish communicate by means of a continuous oscillatory electric signal produced by an electric organ. The electric organ discharges at frequencies which are sexually dimorphic in many species of electric fish. This dimorphism is thought to be attributed to female mate choice, although to date, there is no evidence for mate choice or intrasexual competition to have driven the evolution of this signaling dimorphism in wave-type electric fish. Here, I have tracked changes in body shape and electric organ discharge (EOD) frequency of A. leptorhynchus throughout a breeding conditioning period. I find that only females alter the shape of...
Summary. Pollimyrus isidori's electric organ dis-charge (EOD) is of the pulse type. Patterns of...
Sexually-selected communication signals can be used by competing males to settle contests without in...
FUGÈRE, Vincent, ORTEGA, Hernán y KRAHE, Rüdiger. Electrical signalling of dominance in a wild popul...
B. pinnicaudatus is a nocturnal, pulse type weakly electric fish. Males are larger than females and ...
Feulner PG, Plath M, Engelmann J, Kirschbaum F, Tiedemann R. Electrifying love: electric fish use sp...
The tropical South American teleost Eigenmannia lineata showed a spontaneous preference for the fema...
Electroreceptive bony fishes of Africa (the Mormyriformes) and South America (the Gymnotiformes) det...
Effective communication among sympatric species is often instrumental for behavioural isolation, whe...
A communication signal in an African freshwater electric fish, its pulse-like Electric Organ Dischar...
In adult males of the South African weakly electric bulldog fish, Marcusenius pongolensis, the durat...
Weakly electric fish occupy a special place in the field of neuroethology as a model system for the ...
Natural and sexual selection shape animal communication signals according to the demands of social c...
African weakly discharging electric fish (Mormyridae) use their self-generated electric signals and ...
Animals that co-occur in sympatry with multiple closely-related species use reproductive mate attrac...
textMaintaining a stable social organization necessitates that animals recognize their own dominanc...
Summary. Pollimyrus isidori's electric organ dis-charge (EOD) is of the pulse type. Patterns of...
Sexually-selected communication signals can be used by competing males to settle contests without in...
FUGÈRE, Vincent, ORTEGA, Hernán y KRAHE, Rüdiger. Electrical signalling of dominance in a wild popul...
B. pinnicaudatus is a nocturnal, pulse type weakly electric fish. Males are larger than females and ...
Feulner PG, Plath M, Engelmann J, Kirschbaum F, Tiedemann R. Electrifying love: electric fish use sp...
The tropical South American teleost Eigenmannia lineata showed a spontaneous preference for the fema...
Electroreceptive bony fishes of Africa (the Mormyriformes) and South America (the Gymnotiformes) det...
Effective communication among sympatric species is often instrumental for behavioural isolation, whe...
A communication signal in an African freshwater electric fish, its pulse-like Electric Organ Dischar...
In adult males of the South African weakly electric bulldog fish, Marcusenius pongolensis, the durat...
Weakly electric fish occupy a special place in the field of neuroethology as a model system for the ...
Natural and sexual selection shape animal communication signals according to the demands of social c...
African weakly discharging electric fish (Mormyridae) use their self-generated electric signals and ...
Animals that co-occur in sympatry with multiple closely-related species use reproductive mate attrac...
textMaintaining a stable social organization necessitates that animals recognize their own dominanc...
Summary. Pollimyrus isidori's electric organ dis-charge (EOD) is of the pulse type. Patterns of...
Sexually-selected communication signals can be used by competing males to settle contests without in...
FUGÈRE, Vincent, ORTEGA, Hernán y KRAHE, Rüdiger. Electrical signalling of dominance in a wild popul...