Using well-defined criteria, researchers discovered for the first time
that a cichlid fish species “plays” with objects.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
Scientists
looking to see whether animals play were not just on some fishing expedition.
The University of Tennessee researchers applied criteria for identifying animal
“play” in their study of a cichlid fish species and found that the fish
actually play to have fun.
“Play is
repeated behavior that is incompletely functional in the context or at the age
in which it is performed and is initiated voluntarily when the animal or person
is in a relaxed or low-stress setting,” said lead author Gordon Burghardt,
whose report was
published at the end of September in the journal Ethology.
Play has
been identified in several animal groups, including wasps, reptiles, and
invertebrates, all groups previously long-thought to lack the ability for such
recreation. The jury has been out regarding fish.
“Whether
play occurs in fishes has long been a contentious issue, but recent
observations document that social, object, and locomotor play can all be found
in some species of teleosts,” wrote the researchers.
Burghardt
and colleagues are the first to document play with objects in the fish they
studied. They filmed three male fish individually over a period of two years
and found that the fish repeatedly attacked a bottom-weighted thermometer. The
behavior was independent of the presence or absence of food and other fish,
both in the same aquarium and visible in an adjacent aquarium. The behavior,
they concluded, satisfied the criteria for play.
“The quick
righting response seemed the primary stimulus factor that maintained the
behavior,” said Burghardt. “We have observed octopus doing this with balls by
pulling them underwater and watching them pop back up again. This reactive
feature is common in toys used for children and companion animals.”
“Play is
an integral part of life and may make a life worth living,” added Burghardt.
That is
certainly no fish story!
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