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Author Topic:   Fish that lives on a tree!
SattvicMoon
Knowflake

Posts: 1989
From: Kochi, India
Registered: May 2007

posted October 18, 2007 10:58 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for SattvicMoon     Edit/Delete Message
The fish that can survive for months in a tree
By DAVID DERBYSHIRE -Last updated at 22:20pm on 17th October 2007

Source Article with picture: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=488193&in_page_id=1770

It's one of the golden rules of the natural world – birds live in trees, fish live in water.

The trouble is, no one bothered to tell the mangrove killifish.

Scientists have discovered that it spends several months of every year out of the water and living inside trees.

Hidden away inside rotten branches and trunks, the remarkable creatures temporarily alter their biological makeup so they can breathe air.

Biologists studying the killifish say they astonished it can cope for so long out of its natural habitat.

The discovery, along with its ability to breed without a mate, must make the mangrove killifish, Rivulus marmoratus Poey, one of the oddest fish known to man.

Around two inches long, they normally live in muddy pools and the flooded burrows of crabs in the mangrove swamps of Florida, Latin American and Caribbean.

The latest discovery was made by biologists wading through swamps in Belize and Florida who found hundreds of killifish hiding out of the water in the rotting branches and trunks of trees.

The fish had flopped their way to their new homes when their pools of water around the roots of mangroves dried up. Inside the logs, they were lined up end to end along tracks carved out by insects.

Dr Scott Taylor of the Brevard County Environmentally Endangered Lands Programme in Florida admitted the creatures were a little odd.

"They really don't meet standard behavioural criteria for fish," he told New Scientist magazine.

Although the cracks inside logs make a perfect hiding place, conditions can be cramped. The fish – which are usually fiercely territorial – are forced to curb their aggression.

Another study, published earlier this year, revealed how they alter their bodies and metabolism to cope with life out of water.

Their gills are altered to retain water and nutrients, while they excrete nitrogen waste through their skin.

These changes are reversed as soon as they return to the water.

Previously their biggest claim to fame was that they are the only known vertebrate – animal with a backbone – to reproduce without the need for a mate.

Killifish can develop both female and male sexual organs, and fertilise their eggs while they are still in the body, laying tiny embryos into the water.

They are not the only fish able to breathe air. The walking catfish of South-east Asia has gills that allow it to breathe in air and in water.

The climbing perch of India can suffocate in water unless it can also gulp in air.

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Nephthys
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posted October 18, 2007 03:35 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Nephthys     Edit/Delete Message

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Mirandee
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From: South of the Thumb - Taurus, Pisces, Cancer
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posted October 18, 2007 11:01 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Mirandee     Edit/Delete Message
Cool fish, Moonie

Maybe this fish lends credence to what some have proposed about the evolution of humans. That we orginated in the water and we crawled out and adapted to land.

I mean if a fish can adapt that fast to both water and land it seems probable that maybe we did too in the beginning of creation.

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SattvicMoon
Knowflake

Posts: 1989
From: Kochi, India
Registered: May 2007

posted October 19, 2007 03:09 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for SattvicMoon     Edit/Delete Message
Who is going fishing "up a tree"?

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Mirandee
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From: South of the Thumb - Taurus, Pisces, Cancer
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posted October 20, 2007 11:20 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Mirandee     Edit/Delete Message
A kitty, Moonie.

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SattvicMoon
Knowflake

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From: Kochi, India
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posted October 20, 2007 02:19 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for SattvicMoon     Edit/Delete Message

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Randall
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From: Columbus, GA USA
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posted October 21, 2007 12:11 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message

------------------
"There is no use trying," said Alice; "one can't believe impossible things." "I dare say you haven't had much practice," said the Queen. "When I was your age, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast." Lewis Carroll

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Eleanore
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From: Japan
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posted October 24, 2007 10:54 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Eleanore     Edit/Delete Message

I love nature, really. But some things give me the heebiejeebies. This is one of them. Not that it exists ... that's very cool. Lots to ponder evolution-wise as Mirandee stated. But my healthy heart thank the heavens that I never came across a fish living in a tree.

Just another reason I don't really regret never having visited the Everglades in all the time I lived right there. Have you heard about those lizards that "hibernate" underground when the water levels drop? It's like they die and then come back. You could be walking right over them and not even know it. <shivers>

Whatever phobia it is, creepy crawly cold blooded thingies make me twitchy.


*edited*

Had to look it up ...

herpetophobia - a morbid fear of reptiles

ophidiophobia - abnormal fear of snakes

batrachophobia - a fear of frogs, toads, newts, etc.


ichthyophobia is the fear of fish. Dendrophobia is the fear of trees.
So something like ichthyoindendrophobia might work.

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SattvicMoon
Knowflake

Posts: 1989
From: Kochi, India
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posted October 24, 2007 11:02 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for SattvicMoon     Edit/Delete Message
quote:
Whatever phobia it is, creepy crawly cold blooded thingies make me twitchy.

Jeepers Creepers!

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yourfriendinspirit
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From: California, USA
Registered: Oct 2006

posted January 17, 2008 12:42 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for yourfriendinspirit     Edit/Delete Message
Here fishy fishy....


*Cool article thanks Moonie

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Sendin' love your way,
"your friend in spirit"

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