Feb.
6, 2013 — Same-sized fish stick together, using chemical cues to identify
each other.
Have
you ever wondered why, and how, shoals of fish are composed of fish of the same
size? According to new research by Ashley Ward, from the University of Sydney
in Australia, and Suzanne Currie, from Mount Allison University in Canada, fish
can use a variety of different sensory cues to locate shoal-mates, but they are
able to use chemical cues to find other fish of the same size as themselves.
Using these cues, they can form a group with strength in numbers. The work is
published online in Springer's journal, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
Forming
groups is beneficial for animals. One important benefit is the reduction of
individual risk from predators. Indeed when animals are in groups, predators
are confronted by a number of almost identical prey animals, making it more
challenging to select a target.
Dr.
Ward said, "Fish typically form shoals with fish of the same size. The key
question that motivated our study is this: How on earth does a fish know how
big it is? For humans this is trivial -- we can stand on a flat surface and see
whether we're taller or shorter than someone, or we can look in a mirror. These
options don't exist for fish, so how do they choose to associate with fish of
the same size?"
The
scientists explored which of their senses fish use both to assess the size of
other individuals, and to determine how big they are themselves. They studied
two freshwater shoaling fish species: three-spined stickleback and banded
killfish. In a series of experiments, they exposed the fish to a variety of
chemical cues -- either from fish of the same species of varying sizes or a
control, so-called 'blank' cue. Chemical cues are formed as fish constantly
emit molecules into their surroundings.
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