Fishes are fond of gardening too!
Washington, June 21 (ANI): Damselfish maintain algae gardens and they weed, harvest and defend them, a new study reveals.
The research, to be published in the journal BMC Evolutionary Biology, also found that this arrangement benefits both damselfish and the algae.
According to lead author Hiroki Hata, a researcher in the Graduate School of Science and Engineering at Ehime University, damselfishes defended territories where certain algae grew by chasing off sea urchins and other fish.
"Additionally, an intensive farmer, Stegastes nigricans does weeding on less digestible algae, and it results in a monoculture of a specific algal species," Discovery News quoted Hata, as saying.
Hata and colleagues Katsutoshi Watanabe and Makoto Kato watched with amazement as the damselfish picked up this unwanted algae and dumped it outside of their farm-like gardens.
The researchers also conducted an experiment to see how the fish-preferred algae would grow without the arduous maintenance.
They found that the "weeds" would quickly overcome the other algae.
For the study, the scientists surveyed 320 territories of 18 damselfish species from coral reefs in Egypt, Kenya, Mauritius, the Maldives, Thailand, Borneo, the Okinawa Islands and the Great Barrier Reef.
Although the algae garden crop shifted in the West Indian Ocean, "the intensive farming by damselfish was seen throughout this geographic range," said Hata.
He explained that damselfishes can only eat certain types of algae like the red Polysiphonia, because damselfishes do not have organs and digestive enzymes that would allow them to stomach more fibrous algal species - the "weeds."
These fish gardeners enjoy their harvests, however, pulling up and ingesting the red algae with such gusto that some marine turf is still attached.
Hata said: "The (damselfish) stomach is filled with the algae but we think... animals harbored by the turf are also important food resources."
Fish also compete for land that's suitable for their algae plots.
Some damselfishes grow a mixture of algae crops. "Others maintain small monocultures with higher yield per unit area," said Hata.
The damselfish/algae relationship, "cultivation mutualism," is not usually seen in marine habitats.
Gavin Maneveldt and Derek Keats, botanists at the University of the Western Cape, previously discovered that a certain species of limpet, Patella cochlear, gardens algae along the South and southern West coasts of South Africa. (ANI)
-
Thunderstorm Warning In Delhi NCR: IMD Issues Orange Alert Amid Sudden Weather Shift -
UP STF Nabs Maulana Abdullah Salim Over Controversial Comment On CM Yogi's Mother -
Masood Azhar’s Brother Mohammad Tahir Dies In Pakistan Under Mysterious Circumstances, Cause Yet To Be Known -
VerSe Innovation Appoints P.R. Ramesh as Independent Director and Chair of Audit Committee to Strengthen Governance Ahead of Next Phase of Growth -
“Not Going To Be There Too Much Longer”: Trump Signals Endgame In Iran War -
Iran Threatens To Hit US Companies in Region From April 1, Names Microsoft, Apple, Tesla, Boeing -
‘IPL Official’ Found Dead in Mumbai Hotel, Probe Underway -
Leander Paes To Contest West Bengal Assembly Elections 2026? Tennis Star Joins BJP Ahead of Assembly Polls -
April 1 Rule Changes: PAN, New Tax Law, ATM, FASTag, Cards to Impact Millions, What’s Changing? -
China, Pakistan Call for Immediate Ceasefire in Iran War, Push Peace Talks ‘As Soon As Possible’ -
Iran’s New Hormuz Plan Targets Global Shipping with Tolls, What Does It Mean? -
Are Banks Closed or Open Today on Mahavir Jayanti? RBI Issues Special March 31 Instructions












Click it and Unblock the Notifications