danedodger
Member
Go ahead and dispute, Fixed! You certainly did it politely enough and it's just opinions. I love a good debate but fights have me running for cover!
I'm sure that fish have stress to some degree day in and day out but I study my fish both at home and at work and can tell when one is too stressed in any number of ways. I don't feel I'm anthropomorphising. Take chameleons, for example. I once worked for an awful petshop and they insisted on keeping chameleons in with juvenile iguanas. For anyone who doesn't know chameleons are actually very delicate reptiles that get stressed by too much handling or things moving around too much while juvie iguanas dash and dart around sometimes like little crackheads! These chameleons invariably didn't behave as a normal, relaxed specimin would. They would stay right in one lower corner, pitch black, just look generally miserable, and die. The owner finally quit getting them in saying that they were too hard to keep. They're not too hard to keep if you do it right!
We can look at how a fish behaves in the wild and make some educated predictions about what conditions need to be met in order for them to be happy and healthy in our home tanks. And it seems to me that most often these predictions are proven true when you compare the behaviors and survival of those kept "properly" and the ones kept otherwise.
I'm sure that fish have stress to some degree day in and day out but I study my fish both at home and at work and can tell when one is too stressed in any number of ways. I don't feel I'm anthropomorphising. Take chameleons, for example. I once worked for an awful petshop and they insisted on keeping chameleons in with juvenile iguanas. For anyone who doesn't know chameleons are actually very delicate reptiles that get stressed by too much handling or things moving around too much while juvie iguanas dash and dart around sometimes like little crackheads! These chameleons invariably didn't behave as a normal, relaxed specimin would. They would stay right in one lower corner, pitch black, just look generally miserable, and die. The owner finally quit getting them in saying that they were too hard to keep. They're not too hard to keep if you do it right!
We can look at how a fish behaves in the wild and make some educated predictions about what conditions need to be met in order for them to be happy and healthy in our home tanks. And it seems to me that most often these predictions are proven true when you compare the behaviors and survival of those kept "properly" and the ones kept otherwise.