Any body else seen there fish play

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dan518

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Sep 20, 2014
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Came across this today.


Fish just want to have fun - scientists studying a group of male Tropheus have documented play in cichlids.

"Play is repeated behaviour 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 Gordon Burghardt of the University of Tennessee.

He and his colleagues Vladimir Dinets and James Murphy of the Smithsonian National Zoological Park in Washington, DC, are the first to document play with objects in a cichlid fish species. There are hundreds of species of cichlid, but the behaviour of the species they studied appears unique.

The three male Tropheus duboisi were studied and filmed individually over the course of two years. Researchers observed the fish repeatedly striking a bottom-weighted thermometer. The presence or absence of food, or other fish within the aquarium or visible in an adjacent aquarium, had no effect on their behaviour. The thermometer-attacking behaviour satisfies Burghardt’s criteria for play.

The quick righting response of the bottom-weighted thermometer seemed the primary stimulus factor that maintained the behaviour, according to Burghardt. "We have observed octopus doing this with balls by pulling them underwater and watching them pop back up again," he says. "This reactive feature is common in toys used for children and companion animals."

Burghardt says his research illustrates how play is embedded in species’ biology, including in the brain. Play, like much of animals’ psychology including emotions, motivations, perceptions and intellect, is part of their evolutionary history and not just random, meaningless behaviour.

"Play is an integral part of life and may make a life worth living," said Burghardt.
 
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When I watch my parrot fish, she will sometimes bite and move around plants; or headbutt them sometimes, then she decides to pick up sand and spit it out, but it'd be very hard to say whether that is a territorial response, or simply a play behaviour.

By the same token, it looks like my tiger barbs are playing when they chase each other; then nibble at each others faces, but it's more likely hierarchical behaviour. That's most of what I've seen personally, I don't believe I've seen my fish interact with other objects.
 
I see what I think is playful behavior, for example my Senegal bichir swim constantly up and down the aquarium glass. Then I think maybe they are trying to escape lol.:)
 
My clown and yoyo loaches are playing all the time, with each other and other fish.\

Its definitely playing. They also greet each other with a little side by side wiggle when they side up with each other. I have seen nudging and chasing too.
 
I am use to my Midas rearranging his tank but recently he has started picking up the smallest of the plastic plants and carrying it around the tank then going to the surface and dropping it so it sinks back down then does it all again, this got me thinking when i came across this artical.
 
I have tried getting a vid of him doing it but soon as he see me he stops and comes to the front of the tank
 
I always believe that other creatures on this planet do some of the same things humans do except destroy the planet.
 
Here's an old vid of some Harlequin rasboras I had playing in the filter.

My Oscar always pulls his big fake plant around.
 
The thermometer-attacking behaviour satisfies Burghardt’s criteria for play.

Not to be Debbie downer, but I am not convinced that this behavior that was noted in these (3) male fish, should be considered "playing". Tropheus are a highly social fish that live in a fairly well defined hierarchy within each tank. I might be wrong, but I believe that they may have made some assumptions in their study.

If I place a ball/toy in my male midas tank (I have), and he hammers it from time to time from one end of the tank to the other (which he does), is he playing, or showing typical territorial aggression, as this male species of fish has for hundreds of yrs in the wild?

Personally it doesn't sound to me like these researchers (cough-cough) have done anything unique with cichlids.
 
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