Listen: One of world’s smallest fish makes sound as loud as gunshot, scientists find

This fish, smaller than an almond and transparent is adapted to produce startlingly loud noises. It also has the smallest known vertebrate brain.

BERLIN – Scientists in Germany discovered that a see-through fish, smaller than an almond, can make noises as loud as a gunshot. 

Loud clicking noises coming from the fish tank inside a lab at Charité University in Berlin prompted researchers to investigate the cause. After careful observation and testing, they found that the fish could drum out a powerful sound using their swim bladder. 

The fish, known as Danionella cerebrum, had a drumming cartilage with specialized ribs and fatigue-resistant muscles, which allowed them to "accelerate the drumming cartilage at extreme forces and generate rapid, loud pulses," according to the study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Adults measure just under half-an-inch long.

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The fish were able to tap out clicks at 140 decibels, and researchers believe it's the loudest fish for its size ever discovered. 

"At a distance of one body length away, around 140 decibels is the amplitude of the sound. That's how loud we believe the sound to be perceived by other fish," Verity Cook, the study's lead author and a PhD Student at Charité University, told the BBC. 

At about 3 feet away, the fish were still able to reach 108 decibels, which is a little louder than a jet flying overhead at about 1,000 feet in altitude. 

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It was also discovered that only the male fish are able to make this noise. 

Researchers believe that due to the fish’s natural habitat in the murky waters of Myanmar, male fish have had to adapt to find a way to mate in the low-visibility environment, hence the loud, clicking method of communication. 

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