Title: Guppies and Alpha Male Feeding Patterns
1Guppies and Alpha Male Feeding Patterns
2Introduction
- Native to North Brazil, Guyana, Venezuela,
Barbados and Trinidad - Scientific Name Poecilia Reticula
- Members of the Pike Family
- Live in brackish or salty water
- Average Adult Length 2.5
- Females are slightly larger, less colorful
3Introduction
- Large variety of color schemes and fin shapes
- Colors due to microscopic melanophores located in
the skin - Supporting skeleton with a vertebral column from
head to tail - Ribs attached to vertebrae protect vital organs
4Anatomy
(1) mouth, (2) nostril, (3) eye, (4) lateral
line, (5) dorsal fin, (6) caudal fin or tail,(7)
gonopodium (modified anal fin (8) ventral fin,
(9) pectoral fin, (10) operculum covering gills,
(11) chin. Courtesy of Guppies.com
5Introduction
- Swimming is accomplished by moving the caudal fin
in a figure eight pattern - Bred and raised in captivity for years
- Amateur and Professional Breeders
- Relatively inexpensive
- Dont require heating and filtration apparatus
- Live on just about any fish food
6Experiment
- Currently have three male guppies in one
10-gallon tank - Russian Blue, Double Albino Swordtail, Double
Pastel Swordtail - Purchased approximately four months ago from the
same tank at the pet store - Approximately the same size
7Russian Blue and Double Swordtail
Courtesy of Guppies.com
8Experiment
- Almost immediately, the Double Albino (A1) showed
dominant behavior - Swim to the front of the tank at feeding time
- Consume most of the food floating on top
- The Russian Blue (B1) and the Double Pastel
Swordtail (B1) mostly ate from the bottom of the
tank
9Experiment
10Experiment
- A1 is substantially larger than B1 B2
- B1 B2 move out of the way if A1 swims to their
location
11Experiment
12Shyness-Boldness Continuum
- By Jean Strick
- Waiving a red stick and a lure in a population of
10 Guppies, 2 at a time - Rating
- 1 M (meter stick)-Bold
- 2 M-Shy
- 3. L (lure)-Bold
- 4. L-Shy
13Shyness-Boldness Continuum
- The Guppies were tested 168 times
- Bolder to the non-threatening lure
- Approached it a total of 107 times
- Less bold with the threatening stick
- Approached it only 45 times
- Responded shy to the lure 61 times
- Responded shy to the stick 129 times
14Self Experiment
- Witnessed behavior to attractive stimulus (food)
- Conclusion
- A1 always approached food in bold manner,
regardless of placement of food in tank - B1 B2 approached food in either bold or shy
manner, depending on position proximity of A1
to their feeding pattern - Hierarchy of Alpha selection produced this
pattern
15Self Experiment
- Possible that none of the fish would exhibit shy
behavior towards the food if alone or if B1 or B2
were the Alpha Male of the group - Need threatening stimulus for fish to react in a
shy or bold manner - Tried 10 trials with plastic serving spoon
- Not threatened
- Need something more intimidating
16Self Experiment
- Tried the green net I use to catch the Guppies
when cleaning or changing the water - The Guppies might associate it with something
negative - Noticed profoundly different behavior
- After 40 trials, only B2 approached it one time,
within 2 - All the Guppies did their best to avoid it
17Self Experiment
- Instinct to survive is greater than established
feeding hierarchy - No effort from A1 to protect B1 or B2
- Survival overrides leadership
- Since A1 is larger and more aggressive, he would
end up with more food - A1 would also be more successful mating
18Alpha Male Behavior
- In more advanced animal species, such as wolves,
Alpha Male behavior establishes a hierarchy that
includes - Feeding patterns
- Mating
- Protection of the group as a whole
- Could only test Guppy feeding pattern
- Possibility that with a less advanced brain, only
concerned with personal survival - Humans begin to function at motor skill level
when threatened
19Conclusion
- Guppies exhibit primitive level of Alpha Male
behavior - Does not include higher function
- Not capable of responsibility
- Will try a non-recognizable intimidating object
in future experiments