Fighting fish synchronize their behavior and brain activity 
By Chrissy Sexton US Source: earth 6/17/2020
Chrissy Sexton
Siamese fighting fish, more commonly known as betta fish, are infamous for their highly aggressive behavior. In a new study published by PLOS, experts have discovered that the movements of betta fish become synchronized when they fight.

According to the researchers, each fighting pair exhibits a unique behavioral pattern that is driven by the influence the fish have on each other.
 

Upon further analysis, the researchers found that it is not only the behavior of bettas that begins to sync up during a battle, but also the gene expression in their brain cells.

Betta fish use aggressive tactics such as bites, strikes, and mouth-locking when facing an opponent. Bettas usually stop fighting after they have had the chance to assess each other’s skills, which helps them avoid getting seriously injured.

In the new study, researchers observed that two male opponents were modifying their actions to match the aggressive behavior of the other.

When the researchers analyzed the bettas’ brain activity, they discovered that fighting fish were activating or deactivating the same genes in their brain cells.

The fighting pair showed similar changes in the expression of genes related to ion transport, synaptic function, learning, and memory, and the coordinated brain activity was unique to each pair.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4426Anglers Bradley, Carr Land Enough Fish To Qualify For Regional Bassmaster Eventunderwatertimes2011-09-19US
4427Bay of Fundy farmed salmon found in riversCBC News2011-09-16CA
4428Fish shrinkage probed in labBBC News2011-09-18NO
4429Salmon And Other Fish Predators Rely On No Guts, No Glory Survival Tacticunderwatertimes2011-09-15US
4430Climate change boon to UK seafoodBBC News2011-09-15UK
4431World's largest fishing lure, at 355 pounds, is a real whopperpetethomasoutdoors2011-09-13US
4432Ancient Toothy Fish Found in Arctic—Giant Prowled RiversNational Geographic News2011-09-12US
4433The World's Worst Place To Catch FishUnderwatertimes2011-09-07US
4434Colossal Aggregations Of Giant Alien Freshwater Fish As A Potential Biogeochemical HotspotUnderwatertimes2011-10-06GE
4435Iceland joins alliance to tackle ‘ghost’ fishing gear abandoned at seathegrocer2021-03-10UK
4436Dozens change name to salmonTaipei Times2021-03-18TW
4437Рыбаки предупредили о возможных сбоях в добыче самой дешевой рыбыrbc2021-03-17RU
4438Nearly 4 million fish killed by winter storm along Texas coastfox4news2021-03-10US
4439Scientists Discover an 81-Year-Old Snapperhakaimagazine2021-03-04AU
4440Florida biologists find a live turtle inside a fishtimesnownews2011-09-06US
4441Underground For Millions Of Years, Blind Cave Fish Tell Time On Biological ClocksUnderwatertimes2011-09-06CA
4442Chile Says No To Salmon Farming Off Tierra Del FuegoUnderwatertimes2011-09-01CL
4443Re-Emergence Of Salmon In The Thames Not From RestockingUnderwatertimes2011-09-02UK
4444Angler reels in giant 185lb catfish by himself after friends head to the bardailymail2011-08-30SP
4445For the first time, a river is granted official rights and legal personhood in Canadanewswire2021-02-23CA
4446Quebec’s Magpie River first in Canada to be granted personhoodesemag2021-03-16CA
4447A Canadian River Has Been Legally Declared A Person & It's A First For This Countrynarcity2021-02-25CA
4448Quebec's Magpie River becomes first in Canada to be granted legal personhoodnationalobserver2021-02-24CA
4449Quebec river granted legal rights as part of global personhood movementCBC News2021-02-28CA
4450We asked men with fish pictures in their Tinder profile: Why?thetab2021-03-03UK

219 220 221 177 of [222 - pages.]