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Perfect match: tied contest gives fish no hormone rush.


A male fish produces a burst of hormones as he fights off an intruder An attacker that gains, or tries to gain, unauthorized access to a system. See attacker, intrusion and IDS. . Now, researchers say that this surge isn't triggered simply by fighting.

"Apparently, the fish need to know whether they are winning," says Rui Oliveira of the Institute of Applied Psychology in Lisbon, Portugal.

Oliveira and his colleagues took this view after exposing each fish to a perfectly matched opponent: his image in a mirror. When a male cichlid cichlid (sĭk`lĭd), common name for members of the family Cichlidae, several hundred species of spiny-finned freshwater fishes of moderate or small size, native to Africa, S Asia, Mexico, and Central and South America.  sees his reflection, he displays increasingly menacing postures, as if he's facing off with a live intruder. However, he doesn't show a surge of male hormones, the researchers report in the Sept. 8 Nature.

Fish such as these cichlids (Oreochromis mossambicus The Mozambique tilapia, Oreochromis mossambicus, is an African tilapiine cichlid fish. It is widely used as food and has been introduced in various localities for aquaculture, and may be (erroneously) called "Java tilapia" in trade. ) are valuable for studying the ways in which hormonal reactions change social behavior In biology, psychology and sociology social behavior is behavior directed towards, or taking place between, members of the same species. Behavior such as predation which involves members of different species is not social. , says Oliveira. The male hormones, or androgens Androgens
Male sex hormones produced by the adrenal glands and testes, the male sex glands.

Mentioned in: Acne, Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia, Finasteride, Homocysteine, Polycystic Ovary Syndrome, Salpingo-Oophorectomy

, that his lab tracks show up in similar forms in other animals, including mammals The class Mammalia (the Mammals) is divided into two subclasses based on reproductive techniques: egg laying mammals (the Monotremes); and mammals which give live birth. The latter subclass is divided into two infraclasses: pouched mammals (the marsupials); and the placental mammals.  and birds.

Decades of various researchers' studies have shown that among fish, birds, and mammals, winners' androgen androgen (ăn`drəjən): see testosterone.
androgen

Any of a group of hormones that mainly influence the development of the male reproductive system.
 concentrations surge and losers' dip. These hormonal changes improve or diminish, respectively, an animal's chance of winning his next fight.

In previous work, Oliveira and his colleagues found that just watching a fight boosted androgens in spectator fish. The finding echoed a study of androgens in sports fans watching soccer or basketball. Researchers from Utah and Georgia found that spectators' hormone concentrations rose or dipped, depending on whether they had rooted for a winning or losing team.

To search for more-precise triggers for hormone responses, Oliveira says, he first asked whether the fish had to analyze information about their situation or used some simpler, more direct reaction to fighting.

He and his colleagues exposed some male fish to mirrored surfaces for 20 minutes and other fish to nonreflective glass. The fish looking at the mirrors acted aggressively toward their reflections. After the encounters, the researchers analyzed an·a·lyze  
tr.v. an·a·lyzed, an·a·lyz·ing, an·a·lyz·es
1. To examine methodically by separating into parts and studying their interrelations.

2. Chemistry To make a chemical analysis of.

3.
 androgens in fish-urine samples taken over the next 6 hours. They found no difference between the two groups.

Both groups showed a small drop in hormone concentration typical for the morning hours, when the team conducted the tests. So, Oliveira says, that dip doesn't reflect the reduction in hormone production seen in fish that lose fights.

Ethan Clotfelter of Amherst (Mass.) College comments that he would now like to see experiments comparing fish in matches of similar and dissimilar opponents.

In his work exploring aggression, he, too, has fish fight their reflections. He says that Oliveira's results have convinced him that this common research practice is inappropriate for certain kinds of experiments. "At the very least, this will make a lot of people who study fish say, 'Wait a minute,'" he says.

John Wingfield of the University of Washington in Seattle, who developed a theoretical framework for hormonal influence on social behavior, says that it seems plausible that animals don't respond hormonally unless they can predict a fight's outcome.

"In hindsight hind·sight  
n.
1. Perception of the significance and nature of events after they have occurred.

2. The rear sight of a firearm.
, it seems fairly obvious," Wingfield says. "But Rui has shown it elegantly."
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Title Annotation:Institute of Applied Psychology, Lisbon, Portugal
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Date:Sep 10, 2005
Words:493
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