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Fishy cleaners.


Coral reef coral reef

Ridge or hummock formed in shallow ocean areas from the external skeletons of corals. The skeleton consists of calcium carbonate (CaCO3), or limestone. A coral reef may grow into a permanent coral island, or it may take one of four principal forms.
 fish don't take showers. Instead, they swim over to tiny "cleaner" fish, which nibble Half a byte (four bits).

(data) nibble - /nib'l/ (US "nybble", by analogy with "bite" -> "byte") Half a byte. Since a byte is nearly always eight bits, a nibble is nearly always four bits (and can therefore be represented by one hex digit).
 off their crusty skin deposits. Everyone wins. The little fish get a meal, and their visitors get rid of bothersome parasites.

The relationship, however, is not so simple. The fish that do the cleaning actually prefer to dig a little deeper, taking a little nip of the tasty goo covering the skin instead of just skimming off the parasites. New studies now show that coral reef fish pay attention to how the cleaners do their job, preferring to visit those cleaner fish Cleaner fish are fishes that provide a service to other fish species by removing dead skin and parasites. This is an example of mutualism, an ecological interaction that benefits both parties involved.  that are less likely to bite.

Previous studies had found that, in the wild, cleaner fish seem to react to being watched by taking good care of their customers and biting them less often.

The idea that animals show off their good behavior Orderly and lawful action; conduct that is deemed proper for a peaceful and law-abiding individual.

The definition of good behavior depends upon how the phrase is used.
 and earn rewards from those who see it "has been floating around," says behavioral ecologist Lee Alan Dugatkin of the University of Louisville See also
  • The University of Louisville Cardinal Singers
  • The University of Louisville Collegiate Chorale
  • History of Louisville, Kentucky
  • McConnell Center
References

1. ^ [1]
2. ^ [2] URL accessed on June 8 2006
3.
 in Kentucky. "This is the strongest evidence so far that it's really happening in nature."

In one set of tests, researchers used an aquarium with separate sections. In the middle section, they placed a type of coral reef fish called a bridled monocle bream bream: see sunfish.
bream

European food and game fish (Abramis brama) of the carp family (Cyprinidae). Found in lakes and slow rivers, the bream lives in schools and eats worms, mollusks, and other small animals.
. In the section at each end of the tank, the researchers placed a cleaner fish.

Then, the researchers presented each cleaner fish with a visitor fish to clean. One cleaner got a visitor that was already clean. The other got a visitor that was smeared with delicious prawns.

The monocle bream in the middle could see the cleaner fish, but the cleaners couldn't see the monocle bream. As expected, the first cleaner mostly ignored its already-clean visitor. The second, on the other hand, munched and munched.

In 28 trials, the researchers found, the monocle bream in the center section tended to hover near the cleaner fish that was hard at work-almost as if it were waiting its turn with that cleaner.

In another study, the scientists wanted to see what would happen when the cleaners had an audience. They stocked two plates with both ho-hum fish-food flakes and delectable prawns. As long as the cleaner nibbled the flakes, the researchers left the second plate nearby-as if it were a waiting customer. If the cleaner fish gulped a prawn prawn: see shrimp. , though, the researchers snatched away the second plate.

The fish ate more of the uninspiring uninspiring
Adjective

not likely to make people interested or excited

Adj. 1. uninspiring - depressing to the spirit; "a villa of uninspiring design"
inspiring - stimulating or exalting to the spirit
 flakes when the second plate was nearby than when there was only one plate.

This mimics the situation in the real world, the researchers say. On a reef, a cleaner fish that takes a juicy bite out of a visitor's skin could cause an upset that would drive away a waiting customer.

http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/articles/20060628/Note2.asp
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Sohn, Emily
Publication:Science News for Kids
Date:Jun 28, 2006
Words:461
Previous Article:An ancient spider's web.
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