Animal Pictures Archive
Animal Photo Album
New Photos Animal News Animal Sounds Animal Movies Upload Photo Copyright Korean
Funny Animal Photos Monsters in Animalia Wiki Articles   Fun Facts about Animals Links Home Mobile A.P.A.
Delete Modify    
Tool-Using Fish Caught for First Time on Video [LiveScience 2011-09-29] latin dict size=33   common dict size=582
Image Info Original File Name: fish-tool-11929 - Choerodon anchorago, Orange-dotted tuskfish.jpg Resolution: 642x475 File Size: 122422 Bytes Upload Time: 2011:09:30 14:44:25
Author Name (E-mail): News (from@livescience.com)
Subject Tool-Using Fish Caught for First Time on Video [LiveScience 2011-09-29]
Tool-Using Fish Caught for First Time on Video [LiveScience 2011-09-29]; Image ONLY
Email : E-Card | Poster | Web Master    Delete   Edit Info   Admin
Twitter Facebook Google-Buzz Digg StumbleUpon Linkedin eMail
Description
Tool-Using Fish Caught for First Time on Video [LiveScience 2011-09-29]

[Photo] Choerodon anchorago, Orange-dotted tuskfish. An orange-dotted tuskfish picks up a clam to toss it against a rock in this video still. CREDIT: Giacomo Bernardi, UCSC

A fish using tools to crack open a stubborn clam shell has been caught on video for the first time.

The clip, shot in 2009 off the Pacific island of Palau, shows an orange-dotted tuskfish (Choerodon anchoago) digging a clam out of the ocean floor and carrying the clam in its mouth to a rock. Next, the fish repeatedly tosses the clam against the rock to crush it. (Video: http://www.livescience.com/16292-tool-fish-splash.html)

"The animal excavates sand to get the shell out, then swims for a long time to find an appropriate area where it can crack the shell," videographer Giacomo Bernardi, an evolutionary biologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said in a statement. "It requires a lot of forward thinking, because there are a number of steps involved. For a fish, it's a pretty big deal."

Tool use was once thought to be unique to humans, but lots of animals use tools — and not just primates. Crows, for example can figure out how to drop stones into a water-filled cup to bring a tasty floating worm within reach. Some types of octopus pick up coconut shells and use them as a sort of mobile shelter.

The clam-cracking tuskfish isn't the first fish to be observed using tools. The tuskfish is a kind of reef fish known as wrasse, and these species have been seen using rocks as anvils to crush shellfish. But this is the first time the behavior has been caught on video.

"We don't spend that much time underwater observing fishes," Bernardi said. "It may be that all wrasses do this. It happens really quickly, so it would be easy to miss."

Source: LiveScience - http://www.livescience.com

Copyright Info AnimmalPicturesArchive.com does not have the copyright for this image. This photograph or artwork is copyright by the photographer or the original artist. If you are to use this photograph, please contact the copyright owner or the poster.

Search Major Animal Websites
Misidentified?
Need further identification?
Any comment?
Leave your message here.
Name :    PASSWORD :
Email :
 
Search
Back List Upload Home Korean
CopyLeft © since 1995, Animal Pictures Archive. All rights may be reserved.
Powered by KRISTAL IRMS   iPhotoScrap photo scrap album

Stats