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98: Hearing Tied to Hormones in Midshipman Fish

Discover the fascinating plainfin midshipman mating call and its link to crucial hormone and hearing connections.

Midshipman fry, just hatched, cluster in the intertidal waters off the Northern California coast.Courtesy of Margaret Ann Marchaterre/ Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, and Dr. Andrew Bass

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Every year in late spring and early summer, along coastlines from Alaska to the Gulf of Mexico, a fish called the plainfin midshipman uses its swim bladder to emit an odd droning sound in hopes of attracting a mate. The strategy works, animal behaviorists at Cornell University reported in July, because of a previously unknown connection between hormones and hearing.

The Cornell team found that plainfin midshipman females experience a surge in their hormone levels a month before they respond to the male’s love call. To see if this change enhances their hearing, the researchers caught some females out of breeding season and replaced their ovaries with capsules of either testosterone or a form of estrogen. They then attached electrodes to the fish’s auditory nerves and placed them in a tank equipped with an underwater speaker. Within 30 days, the electrodes began to pick up impulses whenever sounds at high ...

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