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originally posted by: belkide
a reply to: rickymouse
I can really say the tangs try stuff on me =) Very very interesting creatures. Oh btw guys one of the parrot fish is disabled. Born without a back fin. Nobody was getting that guy so I got him. His/her name is Uncle. . As they change sex I don't know if its Uncle or Aunt now =)
“This study reveals the sophisticated process that determines mating decisions and shows a very strong effect of the social environment in the evolution of reproductive behaviour generally,” says Dr Alex Jordan, of the UNSW Evolution and Ecology Research Centre, who co-authored the study with the centre's director, Professor Rob Brooks.
originally posted by: SeaWorthy
Yeah, it's all good looking at other lives from our own point of view. They are just little, just a pet, a joke really. In their own worlds, they make life decisions and choices just like us. I think everyone has the right to live free.
“This study reveals the sophisticated process that determines mating decisions and shows a very strong effect of the social environment in the evolution of reproductive behaviour generally,” says Dr Alex Jordan, of the UNSW Evolution and Ecology Research Centre, who co-authored the study with the centre's director, Professor Rob Brooks.
www.sciencealert.com...
Dude if you ever had a happy spoiled dog, fish can be the same way. When you add the right balance of fish in a tank it becomes an interactive community, not unlike this discussion board.
On the aquarium trade and the popularity of the blue tang, the fish featured in the movie Finding Dory
Some of the methods to catch [blue tang] are pretty awful. Cyanide poisoning, which often kills many of the fishes being targeted, or ones not being targeted, and explosive devices are sometimes used. And then you have the vicissitudes of transport, where they're shipped over continents and the mortality rates are quite high. ...
On some reef fish appearing to recognize individual divers There was a new study ... showing individual recognition of human faces by fishes. So they probably do recognize individual divers. They come up to be stroked. It is almost like a dog. I don't know if they roll over to have their belly petted, though some sharks will be sent into what looks like a euphoric state when they have their bellies rubbed.
They [fish] develop cultural traditions and can even recognize themselves and others They also show signs of Machiavellian intelligence, such as cooperation and reconciliation Professor Brown said the primary senses of the fish are "just as good" and in some cases better than that of humans.
The level of mental complexity that fish display is on a par with most other vertebrates, while there is mounting evidence that they can feel pain in a manner similar to humans.
They showed not only that fish do get feelings, but this study might give us a better understanding of how emotions came to be in the first place. Since fish represent a different evolutionary branch than tetrapods, this might indicate that emotions emerged before the two groups separated. Alternatively, it could be a case of convergent evolution.
www.zmescience.com...