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Old 05-24-2012, 12:51 PM
TheLongRun TheLongRun is offline
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Join Date: May 2012
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If this works and you can repeat results multiple times, you might really be onto someting people would be very interested in.

How are you gonna structure it? Control and multiple differing intensities of magnets to determine that threshold? Seems like a multiple weekend project. That many catfish won't be hard to find.

Good luck. Very very cool, and clever!

Quote:
Originally Posted by MathGeek View Post
The electromagentic reception in sharks is related to organs called, Ampullae of Lorenzini - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. The electroreception in catfish is related to organs called ampullary electroreceptors and is similar in some ways and different in others. See: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science...0096299290575B and http://www.ezo.wur.nl/UK/MSc+project...on+in+catfish/

However, most of the published research is in freshwater catfish, and the different freshwater catfish have widely varying sensitivity levels so the outcome in marine catfish is very hard to predict without any data. In addition to setting what could be the limit of magnetic sensitivity in bony marine fishes, the experiment would also be interesting if it suggests that the use of magnetic hooks might reduce catch rates of marine catfish in situations where bycatch of these species in undesirable. There is some irony in the need to go out and catch 100 hardhead catfish to figure out how one might do a better job of not catching marine catfish!
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