Page 16 - IAV Digital Magazine #435
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iAV - Antelope Valley Digital Magazine
Believe It or Not, Fish Have Personalities—ScientistsSpent A MonthTerrifyingGuppiesToProveIt
By measuring how each guppy react- ed to stress, the researchers deter- mined that some fish were naturally cowards, and some were rela- tively brave.
Five minutes in the life of a guppy, in the terrible spring of 2015:
You’re swimming around with your friends in a tank. You’ve been here for days. Food falls from the sky. Everything is fine.
Then suddenly, you’re netted up and dropped into an alien world, all alone, just you and the glass.
You panic at first, but in time your courage returns and you investi- gate. Glass wall; glass wall; glass wall; glass wall. A scrap of plastic on the aquarium floor provides the only scant shelter. Hmm ...
Splash! A huge beak crashes into the water. If you knew what the University of Exeter was, you might wonder how
a heron even got inside. Instead, you just cower under the plastic and wait for death.
But the beak does not return, and you peek out after a minute or so, and soon the net deliv- ers you back to familiar surround- ings. Food and friends again. The terrible memory fades, and life returns to normal.
For three days. Then the net again, and the same strange tank of ter- ror. Again and again and again — for you are a
guppy in Tom Houslay’s lab, and he wants to under- stand the very core of your being.
The fish could have been any one of the 105 Trinidadian guppies that Houslay’s team at Exeter’s Penryn campus subjected to regu- lar doses of fear two years ago, in an effort to deter- mine whether they had personalities.
It turns out they do, of a sort.
According to the
team’s study, pub- lished Monday in the journal Functional Ecology, each fish demon- strated a unique response to stress, which they endured every three days in the form of a pulley- rigged lawn-orna- ment heron named “Grim,” or a preda- tory cichlid sudden- ly revealed on the other side of the glass.
“Some of them go straight to the shel- ter,” said Houslay, an evolutionary biologist and the study’s lead author. “Some just stop moving, maybe hoping they won’t be seen. Some rush to the side and just swim up and down trying to escape.”
This may not sur- prise anyone who’s kept an aquarium, but Houslay’s team went much farther than your average fish gazer. They injected color- coded polymers under the scales of the guppies, which were randomly selected from a population that grew up at the uni- versity — descen-
dants of the wild inhabitants of the Aripo River in Trinidad.
The researchers filmed, timed and analyzed each fish as it coped with the horror of Grim or the cichlid, nick- named “Big Al.”
By measuring how long each guppy stayed hidden, frozen or otherwise panicked, the researchers deter- mined that some fish were naturally cowards, and some were rela- tively brave.
And that wasn’t a fluke. The guppies kept proving their cowardice or braveness in repeat tests — every three days for four weeks.
“We see quite complex strategies; more complex than we thought,” Houslay said. “The variation isn’t just random. There’s something more meaningful going
on.”
In other words, all those little appar- ently identical fish, who all grew up in the same cushy lab tanks, nevertheless developed unique character traits.
Not as complex as ours maybe, but the fish are all indi- viduals. And that’s important to the study of evolution.
Scientists have long known about such differences in other animals, Houslay said — from chickadees to prawns.
But guppy person- alities hadn’t been studied well, he said. And the species make especially useful subjects for evolu- tionary biologists because communi- ties mature rapidly and — in their native Trinidad — face vastly different environmental challenges depending on what type of predators
live in their particu- lar stream.
Before Grim and Big Al came along, Houslay said, only basic research had been conducted into guppy individu- ality.
Now that he knows they have person- alities, regardless of where they grew up, Houslay wants to know if brave- ness and cow- ardice are passed on genetically, from mother guppy to guppy son.
So his team is breeding the next generation of test subjects — a sprawling family of brother and sister and half-sibling guppies, who will all face their own stress tests.
As for the 105 sub- jects who faced Grim and Big Al, Houslay said, they all went back to their home tanks “to live happy lives again.”
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