Quantity discrimination in female mosquitofish
- 26 July 2006
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Animal Cognition
- Vol. 10 (1), 63-70
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-006-0036-5
Abstract
The ability in animals to count and represent different numbers of objects has received a great deal of attention in the past few decades. Cumulative evidence from comparative studies on number discriminations report obvious analogies among human babies, non-human primates and birds and are consistent with the hypothesis of two distinct and widespread mechanisms, one for counting small numbers (<4) precisely, and one for quantifying large numbers approximately. We investigated the ability to discriminate among different numerosities, in a distantly related species, the mosquitofish, by using the spontaneous choice of a gravid female to join large groups of females as protection from a sexually harassing male. In one experiment, we found that females were able to discriminate between two shoals with a 1:2 numerosity ratio (2 vs. 4, 4 vs. 8 and 8 vs. 16 fish) but failed to discriminate a 2:3 ratio (8 vs. 12 fish). In the second experiment, we studied the ability to discriminate between shoals that differed by one element; females were able to select the larger shoal when the paired numbers were 2 vs. 3 or 3 vs. 4 but not 4 vs. 5 or 5 vs. 6. Our study indicates that numerical abilities in fish are comparable with those of other non-verbal creatures studied; results are in agreement with the hypothesis of the existence of two distinct systems for quantity discrimination in vertebrates.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sexual Harassment Influences Group Choice in Female MosquitofishEthology, 2006
- On the limits of infants' quantification of small object arraysCognition, 2004
- Origins of Number SensePsychological Science, 2003
- A bottlenose dolphin discriminates visual stimuli differing in numerosityLearning & Behavior, 2003
- Cognitive Foundations of Arithmetic: Evolution and OntogenisisMind & Language, 2001
- Sexual selection and sexual size dimorphism in the eastern mosquitofishGambusia holbrooki(Pisces Poeciliidae)Ethology Ecology & Evolution, 1995
- Roaring and numerical assessment in contests between groups of female lions, Panthera leoAnimal Behaviour, 1994
- How do 4-day-old infants categorize multisyllabic utterances?Developmental Psychology, 1993
- Perception of Numerical Invariance in NeonatesChild Development, 1983
- Geometry for the selfish herdJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1971