Colorful cuties show aggression towards their fellows
Research shows that the cute clownfish, made famous by the cartoon “Finding Nemo,” scare away species with the same stripes.
Unlike the star of Disney's Finding Nemo, ordinary clownfish in real life don't tend to share a home with members of their own species, writes The Guardian.
Researchers say they have figured out how fish chase away intruders by counting the stranger's vertical white markings.
Sea anemones that harbor the common clownfish may also provide temporary shelter for other species — as long as they have horizontal stripes, according to previous research or there are none at all.
However, common clownfish do not tend to cohabitate with fish that have vertical markings similar to their own; instead, experiments have shown that they are more aggressive towards fish species painted with such patterns.
Scientists have now discovered that not only the presence of vertical stripes, but also their number helps the common clown fish to recognize its fellows.
Dr Kina Hayashi from the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, first author of the study, said: “It is possible that there are other factors besides white vertical lines that are important for distinguishing the same species. But this experiment at least suggested that the number of white vertical lines is important for distinguishing between the same species and deciding whether to attack or not.”
In a paper published in the Journal of Experimental Biology, researchers from Japan describe how they took young common clownfish that had never seen another species and placed a small transparent box in their tanks. The box contained either a fish of the same species — with an orange body with three vertical white stripes — or a different species of clownfish with different markings.
The results showed that common clownfish exhibited a greater amount and frequency of aggressive behavior towards members of their own species than towards the orange skunk clownfish, which has only a single white horizontal stripe on its back. However, there were no significant behavioral differences observed in relation to other species of clownfish, which all had one or more vertical stripes.
The team then exposed the common clownfish to model fish colored orange , without one, two or three vertical white stripes.
Scientists found that the frequency of these groups' aggressive behavior towards the model was much lower when they were painted without stripes, compared to models with stripes.< /p>
However, based on the behavior of individual fish, the team found that the fish were more aggressive towards the model with three vertical stripes than with a single stripe.
Hayashi notes that the results are interesting, because the ecological role of the white stripe pattern in clownfish, also known as anemonefish, was not previously clear.
“This result supports the idea that anemonefish are able to distinguish between different numbers of white stripes, and differences in the number of white stripes help anemonefish differentiate between their own species,” she said.
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