Same calls, different meanings: Acoustic communication of Holocentridae.

The literature on sound production behaviours in fish in the wild is quite sparse. In several taxa, associations between different sound types and given behaviours have been reported. In the Holocentridae, past nomenclature of the different sound types (knocks, growls, grunts, staccatos and thumps)...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marine Banse, Noémie Hanssen, Justine Sabbe, David Lecchini, Terry J Donaldson, Guillaume Iwankow, Anthony Lagant, Eric Parmentier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2024-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0312191
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850162355697090560
author Marine Banse
Noémie Hanssen
Justine Sabbe
David Lecchini
Terry J Donaldson
Guillaume Iwankow
Anthony Lagant
Eric Parmentier
author_facet Marine Banse
Noémie Hanssen
Justine Sabbe
David Lecchini
Terry J Donaldson
Guillaume Iwankow
Anthony Lagant
Eric Parmentier
author_sort Marine Banse
collection DOAJ
description The literature on sound production behaviours in fish in the wild is quite sparse. In several taxa, associations between different sound types and given behaviours have been reported. In the Holocentridae, past nomenclature of the different sound types (knocks, growls, grunts, staccatos and thumps) has been confusing because it relies on the use of several terms that are not always based on fine descriptions. Our study aims to ascertain whether holocentrids can produce a variety of sounds in the wild and if these sounds are associated with specific behaviours. Additionally, we aim to determine whether sounds produced by hand-held specimens, a common methodology to record sounds in standardised conditions in fishes, could correspond to some sounds produced by free-swimming individuals in natural conditions. Our study shows that all holocentrid species are able to produce sounds in 6 behavioural contexts of both agonistic (conspecific and heterospecific chases, competition) and social signalling types (acceleration, broadcasting, body quivering), in addition to previously described mobbing towards moray eels and symbiotic interactions with cleaner wrasses. In holocentrids, acoustic communication is not only based on single calls but can also involve series of sounds of different types that are arranged randomly. The large amount of combinations within acoustical events for each behaviour, resulting from both the quantity of sounds and their diversity, supports the absence of stereotypy. This suggests that sounds are produced to reinforce visual communication during the day in this family. Our results also suggest that sounds recorded by hand-held fishes are produced naturally in the wild. Our study challenges past nomenclatures and demonstrates sound critical function in augmenting visual communication, advancing our comprehension of acoustic ecology in teleost species.
format Article
id doaj-art-64caaca5c9554d28b99903399ff5c07d
institution OA Journals
issn 1932-6203
language English
publishDate 2024-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj-art-64caaca5c9554d28b99903399ff5c07d2025-08-20T02:22:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032024-01-011911e031219110.1371/journal.pone.0312191Same calls, different meanings: Acoustic communication of Holocentridae.Marine BanseNoémie HanssenJustine SabbeDavid LecchiniTerry J DonaldsonGuillaume IwankowAnthony LagantEric ParmentierThe literature on sound production behaviours in fish in the wild is quite sparse. In several taxa, associations between different sound types and given behaviours have been reported. In the Holocentridae, past nomenclature of the different sound types (knocks, growls, grunts, staccatos and thumps) has been confusing because it relies on the use of several terms that are not always based on fine descriptions. Our study aims to ascertain whether holocentrids can produce a variety of sounds in the wild and if these sounds are associated with specific behaviours. Additionally, we aim to determine whether sounds produced by hand-held specimens, a common methodology to record sounds in standardised conditions in fishes, could correspond to some sounds produced by free-swimming individuals in natural conditions. Our study shows that all holocentrid species are able to produce sounds in 6 behavioural contexts of both agonistic (conspecific and heterospecific chases, competition) and social signalling types (acceleration, broadcasting, body quivering), in addition to previously described mobbing towards moray eels and symbiotic interactions with cleaner wrasses. In holocentrids, acoustic communication is not only based on single calls but can also involve series of sounds of different types that are arranged randomly. The large amount of combinations within acoustical events for each behaviour, resulting from both the quantity of sounds and their diversity, supports the absence of stereotypy. This suggests that sounds are produced to reinforce visual communication during the day in this family. Our results also suggest that sounds recorded by hand-held fishes are produced naturally in the wild. Our study challenges past nomenclatures and demonstrates sound critical function in augmenting visual communication, advancing our comprehension of acoustic ecology in teleost species.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0312191
spellingShingle Marine Banse
Noémie Hanssen
Justine Sabbe
David Lecchini
Terry J Donaldson
Guillaume Iwankow
Anthony Lagant
Eric Parmentier
Same calls, different meanings: Acoustic communication of Holocentridae.
PLoS ONE
title Same calls, different meanings: Acoustic communication of Holocentridae.
title_full Same calls, different meanings: Acoustic communication of Holocentridae.
title_fullStr Same calls, different meanings: Acoustic communication of Holocentridae.
title_full_unstemmed Same calls, different meanings: Acoustic communication of Holocentridae.
title_short Same calls, different meanings: Acoustic communication of Holocentridae.
title_sort same calls different meanings acoustic communication of holocentridae
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0312191
work_keys_str_mv AT marinebanse samecallsdifferentmeaningsacousticcommunicationofholocentridae
AT noemiehanssen samecallsdifferentmeaningsacousticcommunicationofholocentridae
AT justinesabbe samecallsdifferentmeaningsacousticcommunicationofholocentridae
AT davidlecchini samecallsdifferentmeaningsacousticcommunicationofholocentridae
AT terryjdonaldson samecallsdifferentmeaningsacousticcommunicationofholocentridae
AT guillaumeiwankow samecallsdifferentmeaningsacousticcommunicationofholocentridae
AT anthonylagant samecallsdifferentmeaningsacousticcommunicationofholocentridae
AT ericparmentier samecallsdifferentmeaningsacousticcommunicationofholocentridae