Sturgeon fish sex sounds like โthunderโ
These sounds could be used to track the health of populations of the endangered Atlantic sturgeon By Jackie Flynn Mogensen edited by Claire Cameron Atlantic sturgeon in the Hudson River in New York State generate low-frequency โthunderโ sounds while mating, according to recent
These sounds could be used to track the health of populations of the endangered Atlantic sturgeon
Atlantic sturgeon in the Hudson River in New York State generate low-frequency โthunderโ sounds while mating, according to recent research . The findings could be used to help study declining populations of the endangered fish species.
Atlantic sturgeon are massive fish โan individual of the species can grow to about the same length as a Volkswagen Beetle and can weigh more than a parlor a grand piano. And these large animals apparently generate some rather grumbly mating events.
โItโs almost that you feel it more than you hear it,โ said Maija Niemistรถ, a co-author of the study and a researcher at Cornell Universityโs New York State Water Resources Institute, in a statement .
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During spawningโor matingโa female sturgeon releases as many as two million eggs into the water, while males release milt, or fluid containing sperm. Scientists recorded โbiological soundsโ during these events in the Hudson, hearing what they describe as โthunders.โ These are the first recordings of Atlantic sturgeonโs noisy mating, according to the authorsโlake sturgeon, a separate species of fish, are known to make similar โthunderโ sounds during spawning.
Itโs unclear whether the sounds may be a form of sturgeon-to-sturgeon communication or simply the by-product of mating activity, the authors note. In hatcheries, male Atlantic sturgeon have been observed to โthrash againstโ females during the spawning process, the authors write.
This thrashingโand possibly the jiggling of the sturgeonโs swim bladderโcould be generating the rumbling sounds, says Rebecca Cohen, lead author of the study and a postdoctoral researcher at the K. Lisa Yang Center for Conservation Bioacoustics at Cornell. But this is an โeducated guessโ based on other fish speciesโ behavior; more research is needed to confirm the exact reason for the thunders.

