Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 February 2001
This paper was first presented at the RIN97 Conference held in Oxford under the auspices of the Animal Navigation Special Interest Group, April 1997.
Migrating species may utilise hydrostatic pressure. In the aquatic environment, hydrostatic pressure changes much more rapidly than in air. In shallow water, tidal changes will impose larger percentage changes on organisms than those experienced in deep water. Small changes in pressure often cause locomotion (barokinesis) accompanied by orientation to light or gravity, often partially compensating for the equivalent depth change. Until recently, identification of hydrostatic pressure receptors without a gas phase has proved elusive, but it is now known that thread hair receptors in the statocyst of the shore crab Carcinus maenas respond to small changes in hydrostatic pressure. Using a tide machine, the responses of thread hairs to sinusoidally changing pressure cycles have been examined, and this paper reports progress monitoring this receptor and making long-term recordings from hydrostatic pressure sensitive pathways in the crab's nervous system.