The Lumpfish Guy
Fishaholic
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2018
- Messages
- 404
- Reaction score
- 230
Ah I love to see a nature/ Nurture argument.
I would like to start by saying that you both have some very good and valid points.
Byron- I have read the study you are on about, interesting stuff, not a brilliant methodology mind and possibly oversteps findings for the discussion. I actually know the people who conducted the study and even they will admit that there is considerable leeway in the interpretation.
However, as with many traits in humans we simply do not know if these things are coded for in DNA or a product of learned behaviour. And I can give you numerous examples in many different animals on this. Homosexuality and humans jumps to a very controversial front of mind.
So in fish our knowledge is even more lacking. That being said there is some evidence that there is a genetic component to schooling in fish ( Greenwood et al 2013). However this is related to physiological changes, such as that in the lateral line, or neural linkages which facilitates behavioural changes not necessarily that behaviour itself.
It is entirely possible that fish could negate their shoaling behaviour in an aquarium and not have any detrimental effects. (A comparison cannot be drawn with tigers ect as they are entirely different in the wild.) The study you quoted looked at aggression between fish, which was increased in low stocking densities. This is not an indicator of stress, poor welfare or any other issue. Common indicators of stress (biological stress) were not measured, nor were indicators of poor welfare. Feed latency was used, but has been shown to be affected by many different factors which were not controlled for in the experiment. Therefor any welfare conclusions in this study should be taken as a overstepping of the results.
I would like to start by saying that you both have some very good and valid points.
Byron- I have read the study you are on about, interesting stuff, not a brilliant methodology mind and possibly oversteps findings for the discussion. I actually know the people who conducted the study and even they will admit that there is considerable leeway in the interpretation.
Just be aware that you still have to read scientific papers with some degree of caution, these experiments are very specific and controlled and conclusions can only be given about that particular situation tested. an in depth look at the methodology in these papers can tell you a lot about the results and how they can be applied in a real situation.I'd like to see that you understand the issue because it is critical to fish keeping. I cannot understand those who do not accept scientific fact. We cannot change it. It has nothing to do with feeling safe.
However, as with many traits in humans we simply do not know if these things are coded for in DNA or a product of learned behaviour. And I can give you numerous examples in many different animals on this. Homosexuality and humans jumps to a very controversial front of mind.
So in fish our knowledge is even more lacking. That being said there is some evidence that there is a genetic component to schooling in fish ( Greenwood et al 2013). However this is related to physiological changes, such as that in the lateral line, or neural linkages which facilitates behavioural changes not necessarily that behaviour itself.
It is entirely possible that fish could negate their shoaling behaviour in an aquarium and not have any detrimental effects. (A comparison cannot be drawn with tigers ect as they are entirely different in the wild.) The study you quoted looked at aggression between fish, which was increased in low stocking densities. This is not an indicator of stress, poor welfare or any other issue. Common indicators of stress (biological stress) were not measured, nor were indicators of poor welfare. Feed latency was used, but has been shown to be affected by many different factors which were not controlled for in the experiment. Therefor any welfare conclusions in this study should be taken as a overstepping of the results.
No If you look at a scientific study the results are the results, and generally speaking the author has done a good job of interpreting those results. The variation come in the methods. Most experiments happen in controlled circumstances, this makes them inflexible to any other situation. So Especially behavioural studies, which try and isolate specific behaviours are very limited in their scopeI believe Science is open to a lot of interpretation.