We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode How do fish know where a sound comes from? Scientists have an answer

How do fish know where a sound comes from? Scientists have an answer

2024/6/19
logo of podcast Nature Podcast

Nature Podcast

Shownotes Transcript

00:46 How light touches are sensed during sex

150 years after they were discovered, researchers have identified how specific nerve-cell structures on the penis and clitoris are activated. While these structures, called Krause corpuscles, are similar to touch-activated corpuscles found on people’s fingers and hands, there was little known about how they work, or their role in sex. Working in mice, a team found that Krause corpuscles in both male and females were activated when exposed to low-frequency vibrations and caused sexual behaviours like erections. The researchers hope that this work could help uncover the neurological basis underlying certain sexual dysfunctions.

*News: *Sensory secrets of penis and clitoris unlocked after more than 150 years)

*Research article: *Qi et al.)

*News and Views: *Sex organs sense vibrations through specialized touch neurons)

07:03 Research Highlights

Astronomers struggle to figure out the identity of a mysterious object called a MUBLO, and how CRISPR gene editing could make rice plants more water-efficient.

*Research Highlight: *An object in space is emitting microwaves — and baffling scientists)

*Research Highlight: *CRISPR improves a crop that feeds billions)

09:21 How fish detect the source of sound

It’s long been understood that fish can identify the direction a sound came from, but working out how they do it is a question that’s had scientists stumped for years. Now using a specialist setup, a team of researchers have demonstrated that some fish can independently detect two components of a soundwave — pressure and particle motion — and combine this information to identify where a sound comes from.

*Research article: *Veith et al.)

*News and Views: *Pressure and particle motion enable fish to sense the direction of sound)

*D. cerebrum sounds: *Schulze et al.)

20:30: Briefing Chat

Ancient DNA sequencing reveals secrets of ritual sacrifice at Chichén Itzá, and how AI helped identify the names that elephants use for each other.

*Nature News: *Ancient DNA from Maya ruins tells story of ritual human sacrifices)

*Nature News: *Do elephants have names for each other?)

Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy) for more information.