Biology: Scientists play MC Hammer to baby zebrafish to learn how they develop hearing underwater 

Stop, Science time! Scientists are playing MC Hammer to baby zebrafish in order to understand how they develop their hearing underwater.

After developing a special speaker system to play music to the fish, Australian neuroscientists imaged the brains of the larval zebrafish to see which cells reacted.

They found that young zebrafish have considerably better hearing than was thought — with the capacity to react to both high and low frequency sounds. 

People do not often consider the hearing of fish underwater, the researchers said, but such is critical to find food, communicate with each other and escape predators.

The study attracted the attention of MC Hammer himself, who tweeted a link to it. 

After developing a special speaker system to play music to the fish, Australian neuroscientists imaged the brains of the larval zebrafish (as pictured) to see which cells and regions reacted

Rebecca Poulsen, who led the study, is also a DJ herself. 

‘I’ve found underwater acoustics to be a lot more complicated than air frequencies,’ explained the University of Queensland neuroscientist.

‘It is very rewarding to be using the acoustic skills I learnt in my undergraduate degree, and in my music career, to overcome the challenge of delivering sounds to our zebrafish in the lab.’

‘I designed the speaker to adhere to the chamber the larvae are in, so all the sound I play is accurately received by the larvae, with no loss through the air.’ 

To keep the fish still while they studied them, the team placed the larvae in a gel that kept them immobile but still allowed them to breathe.

The fact that zebrafish larvae are tiny means that researchers can look at their entire brains under a microscope and see the activity of each brain cell individually — and figure out how their neurons work together to process sounds.

‘Using this new speaker system combined with whole brain imaging, we can see which brain cells and regions are active when the fish hear different types of sounds,’ explained paper author and sensory processing expert Ethan Scott. 

The researchers have been testing different sounds on the fish to see if they can tell the different between single frequencies, short sharp sounds, gradual crescendos and white noise.

‘When you look at the neurons that light up at each sound, they’re unique. The fish can tell the difference between complex and different sounds,’ Ms Poulsen told the Guardian.

Next, she played the fish a dance track she had composed herself — along with MC Hammer’s hit ‘U Can’t Touch This’.

‘You can see when the vocal goes “ohhh-oh”, specific neurons light up and you can see it pulses to the beat,’ she told the Guardian.

‘To me it looks like neurons responding to different parts of the music.’

Alongside the beats that you can’t touch of MC Hammer, the larval zebrafish have also been played sounds that are components of what they would hear in the wild — like running water, approaching predators and objects hitting the water’s surface. 

'It is very rewarding to be using the acoustic skills I learnt in my undergraduate degree, and in my music career, to overcome the challenge of delivering sounds to our zebrafish in the lab,' said paper author Rebecca Poulsen. Pictured: zebrafish

'It is very rewarding to be using the acoustic skills I learnt in my undergraduate degree, and in my music career, to overcome the challenge of delivering sounds to our zebrafish in the lab,' said paper author Rebecca Poulsen. Pictured: MC Hammer

‘It is very rewarding to be using the acoustic skills I learnt in my undergraduate degree, and in my music career, to overcome the challenge of delivering sounds to our zebrafish in the lab,’ said paper author Rebecca Poulsen. Pictured: zebrafish, left, and MC Hammer, right

Alongside the beats that you can't touch of MC Hammer (who tweeted about the work, pictured), the zebrafish have been played sounds that are part of what they would hear in the wild — like running water, approaching predators and objects hitting the water's surface

Alongside the beats that you can’t touch of MC Hammer (who tweeted about the work, pictured), the zebrafish have been played sounds that are part of what they would hear in the wild — like running water, approaching predators and objects hitting the water’s surface

‘Conventional thinking is that fish larvae have rudimentary hearing, and only hear low-frequency sounds,’ explained Professor Scott.

‘But we have shown they can hear relatively high-frequency sounds and that they respond to several specific properties of diverse sounds.’

‘This raises a host of questions about how their brains interpret these sounds and how hearing contributes to their behaviour.’ 

The full findings of the study were published in the journal Current Biology.

ZEBRAFISH: A MODEL SPECIES 

Pictured: a zebrafish (Danio rerio)

Pictured: a zebrafish (Danio rerio)

Zebrafish (Danio rerio) are a small freshwater fish that belong to the minnow family.

They are native to South Asia, but have become a popular aquarium fish — and are often sold under the trade name zebra danio.

Zebrafish have been used as an important ‘model organism’ for scientific research since the 1970s — especially in the realm of drug development. 

It was chosen for this role because it has a genome we have fully sequenced, well understood developmental behaviours and large, robust and rapidly developing embryos that can be easily studied.

Zebrafish also possess regenerative properties that have been heavily studied. They can regrow fins and also regenerate eye cells when injured, for example.