Abstract

Characteristics of responses of the small pit organs of the catfishIctalurus nebulosus to the action of electrical stimuli of varied polarity, intensity, and duration were studied. Single fibers of the lateral nerve innervating these organs possessed regular spontaneous activity with a frequency of 35–45/sec or grouped activity, coinciding with the rhythm of the animal's swimming movements. Threshold current densities varied from 10−11 to 10−10 A/mm2. Electrical stimuli evoked a phasic-tonic response of the receptor. The latent period was 10–50 msec for on-responses and 10–200 msec for off-responses. In the presence of strong electric fields the receptor responded to a cathodal stimulus by excitation, whereas under ordinary experimental conditions an anodal stimulus is excitatory. The properties of small pit organs are compared with the characteristics of other electroreceptors.

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