New paper alert! Oceanic islands are great places to study how species evolve and disperse because their ecosystems are small and isolated. In the middle of the Atlantic Ocean —St Paul’s Rocks, Ascension, and St Helena— are roughly halfway between South America and Africa
Matéria no G1 - Terra da Gente, sobre o novo artigo liderado pela Isadora Cord que foi publicado no periódico britânico Proceedings of the Royal Society B - https://t.co/Q6MOjfJ1pX
Our new study was just published in Global Ecology and Biogeography. We analyzed diets and distribution of reef fishes worldwide to answer a key question: In what environments do the most ecologically specialized fishes thrive?
Delecambre et al. (2025)
https://t.co/ANrXQzWIqZ
Our new study was just published in Global Ecology and Biogeography. We analyzed diets and distribution of reef fishes worldwide to answer a key question: In what environments do the most ecologically specialized fishes thrive? Delecambre et al. (2025) https://t.co/nZVhWFnhz0
🔧🐟 Wrasses using rocks as tools? It's true!
A new study shows tool use in reef fish is more common than we thought with deep roots in evolution. These clever fish are anything but simple!
📄 See the full article at: https://t.co/LC263ezD4r
Ever since Charles Darwin, scientists have assumed species facing the same problem often evolve similar traits. But that’s not always the case. @iSEAbelle_ng@SiqueiraAleC@EdithCowanUni@jcu https://t.co/QBNz6tRqhK
🐟💥 Think tool use is just for humans, birds, or primates? Think again!
New research reveals tropical wrasses smash open shellfish with rocks—proving fish are smarter (and craftier) than we thought. 🧠🔧 #ReefFish#AnimalBehavior#FishIntelligence https://t.co/K5ujvHIp4b
@pgodfreysmith Hi Peter, what I find particularly interesting about this case of fish 'tool use' is the sagacity of the fish in thinking ahead and swimming to specific locations, such as a preferred rock or coral head, to utilize them
This continental island is Florianopolis, off the coast of southeastern Brazil, connected to the mainland during the Last Glacial Maximum 20,000 years ago.
Check out this cool study on the paleodrainages of the region by Andrea Thomaz and colleagues.
https://t.co/TILoQX3ri7
Did you know that fish also use tools?
The research led by Juliette Tariel-Adam, titled “Fish Tool Use by New World Halichoeres Wrasses” expands scientific knowledge about this fascinating behavior of wrasses from the Halichoeres genus.
See at: https://t.co/LC263ezD4r
The beautiful mesophotic Centropyge boylei (Peppermint angelfish). Depth range 53-120m. I photographed at the Twilight Zone exhibition - California Academy of Sciences