Yeah, not birds. Discovery News writer Jennifer Viegas unveils the most bitter of best friends is likely to be the humble goldfish:
A new study has found that ornamental fish across the U.S. — all 182.9 million of them — are at risk of becoming aggressive due to cramped, barren housing.
In other words, fish can turn mean when their home sucks, according to a new study in the Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science.
“The welfare of aquarium fishes may not seem important, but with that many of them in captivity, they become a big deal,” project leader Ronald Oldfield, an instructor of biology at Case Western Reserve University, said in a press release.
Oldfield’s paper is the first to scientifically study how the environment of home aquariums affects the aggressive behavior of ornamental fishes. The findings are in keeping with related research, though. For example, earlier this year I reported on how cramped tank conditions are turning sea urchins into cannibals.
Want happier, more peaceful fish?
Tanks with more complexity, and of a larger size, helped to reduce aggressive behaviors.
Put more stuff in the tank.