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Cod Fish Have โ€˜Regional Accentsโ€™ and This Could Mean Trouble for Their Love Lives, Scientist Says

October 6th, 2016 โ€” Itโ€™s a tale as old as time: Boy meets girl, but they speak different languages.

However, in this case, the boy and girl are cod fish, and the fact that they canโ€™t speak the same language could mean the demise of their species.

As cod are increasingly moving north due to warming waters, scientists are worried that males from one region may not be able to โ€œchat upโ€ females from another region with a โ€œdifferent dialectโ€ โ€” thus threatening the speciesโ€™ ability to breed, according to Stephen Simpson, a marine biologist and professor at the University of Exeter in the U.K.

Male cod fish vibrate their swim bladders to produce sounds, or โ€œlove calls,โ€ which are meant to โ€œimpress females and stimulate them into releasing eggs for fertilization,โ€ Simpson told ABC News today after he presented his findings at the National Environment Research Councilโ€™s โ€œInto the Blueโ€ science showcase in the U.K.

But the โ€œaccent,โ€ or unique sound of a male fishโ€™s โ€œlove call,โ€ depends on what spawning ground it came from, Simpson said.

Underwater recordings have revealed that male cod fish off Maine make โ€œdistinctly differentโ€ sounds than that of male cod fish off the U.K.

American cod appear to have โ€œhigher pitchedโ€ and โ€œquite repetitiveโ€ love calls in contrast to that of European codโ€™s โ€œmore longer, drawn out rumbling,โ€ Simpson said.

Read the full story at WBT 

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