It is well known that rhythmic lateral bending of the isolated lamprey spinal cord/notochord can entrain the central pattern generator (CPG) for locomotion. During entrainment, the CPG's frequency is equal to the bending frequency. We report here that bending can also have a slowly-decaying excitatory effect on the CPG's frequency. Experiments were performed in which the caudal end of a 30-50 segment piece of spinal cord/notochord was repeatedly rhythmically bent for 0.5-12 cycles. A slowly-decaying excitation was said to be present if after the termination of bending the CPG's frequency was significantly greater than baseline and decayed back to baseline with a time constant of one or more cycles. In 14 of 16 animals, a slowly-decaying excitation could be evoked by bending. In five of the nine animals tested, this slowly-decaying excitation could be evoked with bending frequencies both faster and slower than the baseline frequency. Depending on the animal, the slowly-decaying excitation could be elicited by as little as one-half cycle of bending and by bending amplitudes as small as 6-21 o peak deflection. We interpret these data as evidence of a second effect of bending distinct from the phase-dependent effect that produces entrainment.