fish behaviour Flashcards
why does fish welfare have less public concern
there are many species of first 32000
fish are harvested from wild stocks or grown in intensive aquaculture
theres less human interaction with fish
we dont understand their environment and rarely visit it
what sophisticated behaviours to fish show
long term memories
develop complex traditions
show signs of opportunist intelligence
cooperate and recognize one another
capable of tool use
what is the difference betwee wild and hatchery fish
wild - hatched and reared in a natural environment regardless of parentage
hatchery - bred by genetic crosses, hatched and raised in captivity until juvenile stage and then released (meant to produce fist for harvest)
what is a hatchery mission
to increase number of hatchery programs to restore declining world populations
what is fish stalking
managment tool that helps manage or change fish populations
cannot sustain a fishery above the productive capability of the lake or species
stalking lakes where game fish can reproduce will not improve the fishery
what sizes of fish are typically stalked in sask
fry (few days old)
fingerling (8-12 cm) catchable 20-30 cm and adult
what is aquaculture
farming of fish
shellfish and seaweeds
limited selection and domestication
50% of seasfood we eat comes from farms types: fish, crustaceans, mollusks
what is the difference between man intensive and extensive aquacultures
intensive - man made pools and tanks
extensive - net cages in open water
what type of vision do fish have
increased contrast when foraging on small prey
visual communication
spacial orientation
what is schreckstoff
substance held in special skin cells (club cells) in all ostariophysan fishes
- crucial role in enabling naive fish to recognise dangerous predators via classical conditioning
- when in crisis the substance is released into the water resulting in anti predator reponses in surrouding fish
what is the greatest example of animal migration
as eggs develop and hatch, the larvae imorint chemical signature into home stream
once mature fish return to their home streams by follwoing chemical plumes from the river and matching it to the template laid down during the imprinting stage
what type of cerebral laterilization do fish use
fish prefer to use one side of their brain over the other when analysing sources of information
pattern of laterality varies between species, between populations of species and individuals
right eye is commonly used for looking for predators or other threats
what is the left eye commonly used for
to view school mates
what is time and place learning
association of day and location of feeding
demonstrated in many fish species -
if sish show anticipatory behaviour by congregating at the feeding end - they have learned the task
what is an example of pavlovian conditioning
fish learned that when a light was turned on food would be shortly delivery down the feeding tube