394 



MECHANICAL AND ACOUSTICAL SENSES 



Table 1. Summary of experiments in which sharks were attracted to an under- 

 water transducer (speaker) during playback of low- frequency, pulsed sounds.* 



C. leucas 



C. longimanus 



C. melanopterus 

 C. menisorrah 



C. springeri 

 Galeocerdo cuvieri 

 Negaprion brevirostris 



Negaprion fosteri 

 Prionace glauca 



Rhizoprionodon porosus 



Triaenodon obesus 



Lamnidae 

 Isurus oxyrinchus 



Orectolobidae 

 Ginglymostoma cirratum 



Sphyrnidae 

 Sphyrna sp. 

 S. tiburo 



Myrberg et al. 1975a 

 Myrberg et al. 19756 

 Myrberg et al. 1976 

 Nelson & Gruber 1963 

 Myrberg et al. 1975a 

 Myrberg et al. 1975b 

 Myrberg et al. 1976 

 Nelson & Johnson 1970 

 Nelson & Johnson 1972 

 Brown 1968 

 Nelson & Johnson 1970 

 Nelson & Johnson 1972 

 Myrberg et al. 1969 

 Nelson & Gruber 1963. 

 Nelson & Gruber 1963 

 Banner 1968 

 Banner 1972 

 Nelson & Johnson 1972 

 Nelson & Johnson 



(unpublished) 

 Richard 1968 

 Myrberg et al. 1969 

 Brown 1968 



Nelson & Johnson 1970 

 Nelson & Johnson 1972 



Nelson & Johnson 

 (unpublished) 



Richard 1968 

 Myrberg et al. 1969 

 Nelson et al. 1969 



Nelson & Gruber 1963 

 Nelson et al. 1969 



*Taken in part from Nelson and Johnson 1972. 



'Types of artificially produced (A), and naturally recorded (N) pulsed sounds: FN, 

 filtered random or white noise; BbN, broadband noise; SqW, square waves; SpF, speared 

 struggling fish; HF, hooked struggling fish; StF, stampeded group of fish; and FS, fish 

 sounds. 



