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Florida Fish Sounds
During a recent vacation in St. Augusting, Florida, I was able to make some recordings on the last night of our stay. While dinning at Aunt Kate's restaurant in Vilano Beach, I noticed a nice fishing pier and boat dock on the Tolomato River. I was able to come back a few nights later to record sounds for a couple hour late at night.
Fishing pier recording site |
Looking up at pier from floating dock |
View of boat ramp from pier |
View of restaurant from pier |
As soon as I dropped the hydrophone in the water I was met with a cacophony of sounds, dominated by the boatwhistle call of the toadfish, Opsanus tau. Here is a short clip.
After some time, a small motorboat came up the river and passed by the pier. I was surprised to see an apparent response of the toadfish which seemed to stop calling as the boat
passed. More unexpectedly they also seemed to delay resumption of calls until after the noisy boat wake had subsided (the wake caused wave noise, as well as a lot of dock rocking noises).
It’s not clear if the delay reduction in toadfish sounds during the wake noise was a response to that noise, or simply a delay in returning to normal after the boat noise impact.
Unfortunately, sound files long enough to show this in context are too large to post online, so I provide a spectrogram of the noise over the long sequence, and short clips at
representative times.
I was able to capture and audition three fish, two hardhead catfish, Ariopsis felis, and one gafftopsail catfish, Bagre marinus. Both species make similar sounds, and one
of each species produced two different sounds during auditioning. I could feel the vibrations coming from different locations as I held the fish during auditioning. I was a bit
shocked when I heard all three individuals calling while I was capturing them. In all my efforts over the years with many species, I've rarely heard fish call while fighting the line.
Sounds are almost always heard only as you handle the fish.
Hardhead catfish, Ariopsis felis
An approximately 10 inch hardhead catfish, Ariopsis felis auditioned at approximately 2330 h on 30 April 2019 on the Tolomato River, Vilano Beach, Florida.
Spectrogram of Ariopsis felis sounds
Gafftopsail catfish, Bagre marinus
An approximately 10 inch Gafftopsail catfish, Bagre marinus auditioned at approximately 2315 h on 30 April 2019 on the Tolomato River, Vilano Beach, Florida.
Spectrogram of Bagre marinus sounds
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The sound was filtered to highlight the catfish sound so the sounds of toadfish and others animals will be distorted when listening to the clip. Two types of sounds were
produced by the specimen, the "normal"
grunt, and a weaker higher frequency grunt labeled type 1 and 2, respectively.
Listen to the sound (mp3)
Download the filtered sound (wav)
The sound was filtered to highlight the catfish sound so the sounds of toadfish and others animals will be distorted when listening to the clip.
Listen to the sound (mp3)
Download the filtered sound (wav)