🌟 Exclusive Amazon Black Friday Deals 2024 🌟

Don’t miss out on the best deals of the season! Shop now 🎁

Wild guppies

Myrkk

Fish Crazy
Joined
Jul 26, 2017
Messages
223
Reaction score
159
Location
Scotland
I found this quite interesting that guppies in the wild, if they're in a pond with no predators, will produce fewer but larger young as they don't have to worry about predation. However, guppies further down the stream in an area with predators will produce many smaller young in the hope that some will live to adulthood. Amazing, makes me wonder about the genetics behind our aquarium guppies
 
Can you reference a study that shows this? I would be curious to read it.
there's this show on Netflix called Alien Worlds. mentions that in places with predators, they will produce many small fry so that maybe some can survive. in places with little predators, they want the fry that are definietly going to survive to get a healthy start in life.
 
If thats true that is really amazing!
 
If thats true that is really amazing!
i can KINDA confirm. in my tank, it's really peaceful and there's no threats whatsoever. the baby guppies are really big compared to wheni had a small tank where they could be eaten quickly
 
i can KINDA confirm. in my tank, it's really peaceful and there's no threats whatsoever. the baby guppies are really big compared to wheni had a small tank where they could be eaten quickly
Really cool observation!
 
I found this quite interesting that guppies in the wild, if they're in a pond with no predators, will produce fewer but larger young as they don't have to worry about predation. However, guppies further down the stream in an area with predators will produce many smaller young in the hope that some will live to adulthood. Amazing, makes me wonder about the genetics behind our aquarium guppies

Can you reference a study that shows this? I would be curious to read it.
This is general known that it happens like this. It's a surviving tactic. This is to give the species a chance to survive. This happens with lots of living animals. And with more predation, color will also lack more on the guppy's body. There where no predation is present, wild guppies tend to show more coloration. But this happens also with other kinds of livebearers (not all) in the wild.
 
Can you reference a study that shows this? I would be curious to read it.
What Sgoosh said, I saw it on that series... it's a great series cross referencing our understanding of the earth with what life might look like on other planets that have the capability to support life but are not environmentally identical to the earth.
 

Most reactions

Back
Top