First published online July 26, 2004
Journal of Experimental Biology 207, 2907-2916 (2004)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2004
doi: 10.1242/jeb.01126
The electric fish Brachyhypopomus pinnicaudatus produces jamming avoidance responses to signals that are harmonically related to its own discharges
Alberto Capurro1,2,* and
Khashayar Pakdaman3
1 Instituto de Física, Universidade de São Paulo (USP), Rua do
Matão, Travessa R187, Cidade Universitaria, Butantã, 05508-900
São Paulo, Brasil
2 Instituto de Investigaciones Biológicas Clemente Estable,
Departamento de Neurofisiologia, Facultad de Ciencias, Avenida Italia 3318,
Montevideo 11600, Uruguay
3 Institut Jacques Monod, CNRS, Universites Paris 6, Paris 7, 2 Place
Jussieu, 75251 Paris Cedex 05, France

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Fig. 2. Jamming avoidance responses (JARs) in different settings or simulated.
Interval and delay plots. (A,B) Female electric organ discharge (EOD)
intervals are represented by circles; male EOD delay with respect to the
female EOD are represented by asterisks plus lines. (A) Fish pair in
laboratory settings (depicted in Fig.
1A). (B) Fish pair in natural environment (depicted in
Fig. 1B). (C-F) Data generated
numerically. Female train shown as interval vs time (circles); male
train shown as delay vs time (asterisks plus lines).
M*, mean interval in the absence of perturbations. (C)
Data generated with model X attempting to mimic the situation in A; female
faster train (M*=36.0 ms); male slower train
(M*=36.5 ms). (D) Data generated with model Z attempting
to mimic the situation in B. Female slower train (M*=36.0
ms); male faster train (M*=18.0 ms). (E) Data generated
with model Z attempting to mimic the situation in A. Female faster train
(M*=36.0 ms); male slower train
(M*=36.5 ms). (F) Data generated with model Z attempting
to mimic the situation in B. Female slower train (M*=36.0
ms); male faster train (M*=18.0 ms).
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Fig. 1. Jamming avoidance responses (JARs) in interacting pairs of
Brachyhypopomus pinnicaudatus. Different pairs in A and B. Inter-EOD
event intervals (ms) as a function of ongoing time (s). Female, red trace;
male, blue trace. Mean intervals estimated from portions without transient
interval shortenings. (A) Interval ratio of female to male close to 1:1 (in
the laboratory). Mean intervals during the interaction: female, 19.5 ms; male,
20 ms. (B) Interval ratio of female to male close to 2:1 (natural
environment). Mean intervals during the interaction: female, 36.0 ms; male,
18.0 ms.
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Fig. 3. Jamming avoidance responses (JARs) with 2:1 female:male period ratios:
natural and simulated. Interval and delay plots. Fast male electric organ
discharge (EOD) represented by intervals (circles); slow female EOD
represented by its delay with respect to the male EOD (asterisks plus lines).
(A) Fish pair in natural environment (same as in
Fig. 2B). (B) Simulation using
the incomplete version of model Z (same as in
Fig. 2F). Male fast train
(M*=18.0 ms); female slow train
(M*=36.0 ms).
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Fig. 4. Jamming avoidance responses (JARs) and artificial pulses. Interval and
delay plots. Isolated fish electric organ discharge (EOD) represented by
intervals (circles); artificial pulses represented by delays relative to the
EOD (asterisks with lines) and intervals (thick gray line). (A) 1:1 period
ratio (male EOD). (B) 2:1 period ratio (male EOD). (C) JARs (female EOD) arise
with 2:1 period ratios but not when those ratios vary because EOD intervals
change. (D) JARs (male EOD) with 2:1 period ratios but not when those ratios
vary because pulse intervals change. (E) 3:1 period ratio (female EOD). (F)
Numerically generated data referring to the situation depicted in E. The slow
train is plotted as interval vs time with black circles and
represents the fish. The fast train represents the artificial pulses and is
plotted both as delay vs time (asterisks plus lines) and as interval
vs time (thick gray line). M* of the fast
train=12.0 ms; M* of the slow train=36 ms.
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Fig. 5. Jamming avoidance responses (JARs) with 1:2 `electric organ discharge (EOD)
to pulse' period ratios: natural and simulated. Interval and delay plots. EODs
represented by intervals (black circles); artificial pulses represented by
delays relative to the EOD (asterisks with lines). (A) Live fish: mean
interval=68.0 ms; pulse interval=141.3 ms. (B) Failure of incomplete model Z,
which responds only if pulses occur at consecutive sensitive windows. For B
and C, fast train M*=36.0 ms; slow train
M*=73.0 ms. (C) Success of complete model Z+, which
responds to pulses arriving either at consecutive or every other sensitive
window.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2004