Goby fish can act like Goldilocks, too 
By Sara Loy IN Source: indianapublicmedia 12/20/2021
Sara Loy
Credit: Klaus Stiefel
We all know the familiar fairytale: Goldilocks enters the three bears’ house and wants to take a nap. Upon feeling the mattresses, she decides that the first bed is too hard; the second bed is too soft; and the third bed is just right!

If this classic story got an aquatic, twenty-first-century update, it might have a new heroine: Goby-locks, as in, the round goby fish, the subject of a study about tactile sensation.

Goby-locks isn’t interested in mammalian mattresses; instead, she rests on the lake floor, brushing her fins over its rocky surface. Previously, scientists thought a fish’s fins were mere motors, useful only for locomotion. This study, however, shows that a round goby’s fins are more like fingertips, able to distinguish between different textures and pressures.
 

To run the study, scientists gathered six gobies from Lake Michigan. They then rolled a bumpy plastic ring across each pectoral fin. The bumps imitated the lakebed: close-textured bumps mimicked the grittiness of sand, while spaced-out bumps mimicked gravelly pebbles. As they recorded electrical spikes from the fins’ nerves, the scientists noticed a pattern: the bumpier the ring, the more electrical spikes were produced. And when the ring sped up, so did the spikes.

All these bumps and spikes suggest that the nerves of Goby-locks’s fin fire like the nerves of us primates—a useful skill in murky waters. Can other fish feel touch the same way? The study opens the door to further research on tactile sensitivity. Goby-locks, meanwhile, continues to explore the world around her—perhaps she’ll find a lakebed that feels just right.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4501Humans push a hulking fish with a chainsaw nose towards oblivionNature2021-02-12US
4502Disabled fish gets special life jacket made to help him swimnypost2021-02-15UK
4503Scientists Set Sail To Study Bluefin Tuna Spawning Grounds In The Oil-Tainted GulfUnderwatertimes2010-05-19CA
4504First As Oregon Man Sentenced For 'In Stream Work', Habitat Alteration; 'Coho Salmon Are A Gift'Underwatertimes2010-04-20US
4505Salmon may have been too tired to navigate Whitehorse fish ladder, research suggestsCBC News2021-02-16CA
4506Asian carp may be in Lake MichiganCBC News2010-03-24CA
4507Fish die as Ukrainian authorities empty reservoirkyiv post2010-03-16UA
4508'Chemical cocktail' caused fish mutations: reportThe Sunshine Coast Daily2010-03-15AU
4509Do fish have feelings too? It's a slippery question for sciencedaily mail2010-03-08CA
4510Canada border now has its own exhibit at the Aquarium of NiagaraWGRZ2021-02-22US
4511Charleston angler lands monster trout from wheelchairwvgazettemail2021-02-06US
4512Fish Use 'Secret' Ultraviolet Vision To Distinguish Between Speciesunderwatertimes2010-02-28AU
4513Canal search locates no Asian carpupi2010-02-18US
4514Amid carp threat, a call to unhookwsj2010-02-17CA
4515UN Turns To Forensic Science To Help Combat Illegal Fishing; 'We Need To Push The Envelope'Underwatertimes2010-02-01IT
4516A nature walk on the Oyster River and some non-retention fishingcampbell river mirror2019-10-11CA
4517Catching Pink Salmonislandfishermanmagazine2020-08-05CA
4518Father-daughter ice fishing on the Bay of Quinte a cherished traditionThe Globe and Mail 2021-02-14CA
4519U.S. Retailer Target To Dump Farmed Salmon For Wild Alaska Salmon; 'Incredible Willingness To Challenge Old Paradigms'Underwatertimes2010-01-26US
4520Grumpy-looking blobfish in danger of being wiped out - see the picturesMirror.co.uk2010-01-25UK
4521Fish Boom Makes Splash in Oregonwsj2010-01-21US
4522White House to hold Asian carp summitupi2010-01-21US
4523African fish choose safety over sexCBC News2010-01-18CA
4524More than 200,000 descend on fishing festival to catch trout in a frozen riverdaily mail2010-01-19UK
4525Light shed on fish gill mysteryBBC News2010-01-13CA

215 216 217 180 of [218 - pages.]