What a Fish Knows: The Inner Lives of Our Underwater Cousins
What a Fish Knows: The Inner Lives of Our Underwater Cousins book cover

What a Fish Knows: The Inner Lives of Our Underwater Cousins

Hardcover – June 7, 2016

Price
$31.60
Format
Hardcover
Pages
304
Publisher
Scientific American / Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0374288211
Dimensions
1.1 x 5.8 x 8.1 inches
Weight
15.2 ounces

Description

Longlisted for the 2017 PEN / E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award One of the 10 Best Popular Science Books of 2016: Biological Sciences, Forbes One of the Week's Best Science Picks, Nature A "Must Read" Book, The Sunday Times (London) One of the Best Books of the Year, National Post "Latest Reads to Pique Your Curiosity," The Toronto Star “Numerous books have shown me how utterly ignorant I am about most creatures I share this planet with, but none humbled me more than What a Fish Knows by Jonathan Balcombe.” ―Cornelia Funke, The Observer "We Buddhists consider all animals, including fish, as sentient beings who have feelings of joy and pain just as we humans do. We also believe that they have all been kind to us as our mothers many times in the past, and are deserving of our compassion. Therefore, we try to help them in whatever way we can and at least avoid doing them harm. In What A Fish Knows , Jonathan Balcombe vividly shows that fish have feelings and deserve consideration and protection like other sentient beings. I hope reading it will help people become more aware of the benefits of vegetarianism and the need to treat animals with respect." ― The Dalai Lama "An extended exploration of the world from a piscine perspective . . . Balcombe makes a persuasive case that what fish know is quite a lot." ―Elizabeth Kolbert, The New York Review of Books "[An] exhaustively researched and elegantly written argument for the moral claims of ichthyofauna." ― Nathan Heller, The New Yorker " What a Fish Knows will leave you humbled, thrilled, and floored. Jonathan Balcombe delivers a revelation on every page, presenting jaw-dropping studies and stories that should reshape our understanding of, and compassion for, some of the most diverse and successful animals who have ever lived. After reading this, you will never be able to deny that fishes love their lives as we love ours, and that they, too, are vividly emotional, intelligent, and conscious. Bravo!" ―Sy Montgomery, author of The Soul of an Octopus , a National Book Award finalist "Balcombe builds a persuasive argument. Writing in a straightforward, somewhat breezy style, he makes his case partly through a compendium of fascinating anecdotes and scientific findings that illustrate the complexity and creativity of fish behavior . . . Dozens of startling revelations emerge." ―Alan de Queiroz, The Wall Street Journal "One of the most enlightening books I have ever read . . . What a Fish Knows will change the way you view fishes and their world." ―Dr. Mariappan Jawaharlal, The Huffington Post "Balcombe has touched a nerve in me." ―Renée E. D’Aoust, Los Angeles Review of Books "Beautiful . . . we’re much more similar to fish than meets the eye." ―David Gruber, Ideas.TED.com ("What Should You Read This Summer?") "As ethologist Jonathan Balcombe notes in this engrossing study, breakthroughs are revealing sophisticated piscine behaviours. Balcombe glides from perception and cognition to tool use, pausing at marvels such as ocular migration in flounders and the capacity of the frillfin goby ( Bathygobius soporator ) to memorize the topography of the intertidal zone." ―Barbara Kiser, Nature "Balcombe covers the waterfront, so to speak, from fish cognition and perception to their social structures and breeding practices, all the while drawing on a dizzying array of experiments and studies. In the hands of a lesser writer, the sheer weight of material could have overburdened the reader. But Balcombe’s prose is lively and clear, showcasing his gift for pithy sentences." ― Eugene Linden, The American Scholar " What a Fish Knows bubbles with astounding fish facts." ― Kate Horowitz, Mental Floss "[An] eye-opening look at the lives of fish." ―Christopher Hart, The Times (London) " What a Fish Knows seeks to acquaint us with the 'fabulous diversity' of sentient beings in our waters." ―Sarah Murdoch, The Toronto Star "The simple fact that fish live in an alien environment has created an information gap that scientists have been hard-pressed to bridge. Until now. Jonathan Balcombe, a professor of animal studies, fills the void in his new book What a Fish Knows , which argues we’re not as different from our water-brethren as you’d think." ―Joselin Linder, New York Post " What a Fish Knows . . . certainly left this piscivorous angler queasy about picking up his rod. There are other ways of interacting with these marvelous animals . . . Perhaps we should treat our aquatic kin with a bit more respect." ―Ben Goldfarb, Hakai magazine "This is a book full of wonders." ―David Profumo, Literary Review "With the vivacious energy of a cracking good storyteller, Balcombe draws deeply from scientific studies and his own experience with fish to introduce readers to them as sentient creatures that live full lives governed by cognition and perception . . . Balcombe makes a convincing case that fish possess minds and memories, are capable of planning and organizing, and cooperate with one another in webs of social relationships." ― Publishers Weekly "[A] sparkling exposition on 'our underwater cousins' . . . [and] a compelling pitch for greatly expanding fish conservation." ―Ray Olson, Booklist "[Balcombe] offers an enjoyable, surprising and sometimes gruesome exploration of the world of fish, written with clarity and humor and grounded in many scientific studies . . . The breadth and depth of his research and his enthusiastic storytelling may permanently alter how [readers] look at a pet goldfish or a can of sardines." ― Sara Catterall, Shelf Awareness "Balcombe's breathtaking book should instill a sense of humility and enormous wonder and awe at the rest of creation." ―David Suzuki, scientist, environmentalist, and broadcaster "Outstanding. This excellent book brings fishes into their proper and well-deserved perspective." ― Dave DeWitt, food historian "I thought I knew a lot about fishes. Then I read What a Fish Knows . And now I know a lot about fishes! Stunning in the way it reveals so many astonishing things about the fishes who populate planet Earth in their trillions, this book is sure to 'deepen' your appreciation for our fin-bearing co-voyagers, the bright strangers whose world we share." ― Carl Safina, author of Beyond Words "Based on the latest scientific research, What a Fish Knows offers an eye-opening tour of the social, mental, and emotional lives of fishes. Who knew fishes use tools, appreciate music, fall for the same optical illusions we do, and engage in both cooperative hunting and some very kinky sex? Jonathan Balcombe's book is popular science writing at its best. It will spin your head around." ―Hal Herzog, author of Some We Love, Some We Hate, Some We Eat " What a Fish Knows is a delightful and fascinating book that should be read by all who have dismissed fishes, especially the smaller denizens of the ocean, as utterly simple, primitive creatures. Jonathan Balcombe's lively descriptions of fish behavior are backed by solid science. What Carl Safina’s Beyond Words did for elephants, wolves, and orcas, Balcombe's book does for fishes. It is a terrific read." ―Wendy Benchley, ocean conservationist and co-founder of the Peter Benchley Ocean Awards "Fishes are greatly misunderstood and grievously maligned. Now, in What a Fish Knows , Jonathan Balcombe uses the latest science to provide a comprehensive picture of just who fishes are. You will learn that fishes have distinct personalities, experience a wide range of emotions, form intricate social relationships, and are wonderful parents. Indeed, this forward-looking and long-overdue book is an integral part of reconnecting with the fascinating animals with whom we share our magnificent planet." ―Marc Bekoff, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals and Rewilding Our Hearts " What a Fish Knows is the best book on fishes I have ever read. Brimming with engrossing anecdotes and humor, Jonathan Balcombe's inspiring treatise takes the reader on a fascinating and deeply moving journey into the lives of fishes. Balcombe's eloquent, persuasive, highly readable tour de force has a single, luminous message: Fishes deserve more respect, care, and protection." ―Chris Palmer, author of Shooting in the Wild and Confessions of a Wildlife Filmmaker Jonathan Balcombe is the director of animal sentience at the Humane Society Institute for Science and Policy and the author of Second Nature and Pleasurable Kingdom . A popular commentator, he has appeared on The Diane Rehm Show , the BBC, and the National Geographic Channel, and in several documentaries, and is a contributor of features and opinions to The New York Times , The Washington Post , The Wall Street Journal , Nature , and other publications. He lives in Maryland. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. What a Fish Knows The Inner Lives of Our Underwater Cousins By Jonathan Balcombe Farrar, Straus and Giroux Copyright © 2016 Jonathan BalcombeAll rights reserved.ISBN: 978-0-374-28821-1 Contents Title Page, Copyright Notice, Dedication, Prologue, PART I: THE MISUNDERSTOOD FISH, PART II: WHAT A FISH PERCEIVES, What a Fish Sees, What a Fish Hears, Smells, and Tastes, Navigation, Touch, and Beyond, PART III: WHAT A FISH FEELS, Pain, Consciousness, and Awareness, From Stress to Joy, PART IV: WHAT A FISH THINKS, Fins, Scales, and Intelligence, Fins, Scales, and Intelligence, Tools, Plans, and Monkey Minds, PART V: WHO A FISH KNOWS, Suspended Together, Social Contracts, Cooperation, Democracy, and Peacekeeping, PART VI: HOW A FISH BREEDS, Sex Lives, Parenting Styles, PART VII: FISH OUT OF WATER, Epilogue, Notes, Acknowledgments, Index, Photographs, Also by Jonathan Balcombe, A Note About the Author, Copyright, CHAPTER 1 THE MISUNDERSTOOD FISH We shall not cease from exploration And the end of all our exploring Will be to arrive where we started And know the place for the first time. — T. S. Eliot What we casually refer to as "fish" is in fact a collection of animals of fabulous diversity. According to FishBase — the largest and most often consulted online database on fishes — 33,249 species, in 564 families and 64 orders, had been described as of January 2016. That's more than the combined total of all mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians. When we refer to "fish" we are referring to 60 percent of all the known species on Earth with backbones. Almost all modern fishes are members of one of two major groups: bony fishes and cartilaginous fishes. Bony fishes, scientifically termed teleosts (from the Greek teleios = complete, and osteon = bone), make up the great majority of fishes today, numbering about 31,800 species, including such familiar ones as salmons, herrings, basses, tunas, eels, flounders, goldfishes, carps, pikes, and minnows. Cartilaginous fishes, or chondrichthyans ( chondr = cartilage, and ichthys = fish), number about 1,300 species, including sharks, rays, skates, and chimaeras. Members of both groups have all ten body systems of the land-dwelling vertebrates: skeletal, muscular, nervous, cardiovascular, respiratory, sensory, digestive, reproductive, endocrine, and excretory. A third distinct group of fishes is the jawless fishes, or agnathans ( a = without, and gnatha = jaws), a small division of about 115 species comprising lampreys and hagfishes. We conveniently classify animals with backbones into five groups: fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. This is misleading because it fails to represent the profound distinctions among fishes. The bony fishes are at least as evolutionarily distinct from the cartilaginous fishes as mammals are from birds. A tuna is actually more closely related to a human than to a shark, and the coelacanth — a "living fossil" first discovered in 1937 — sprouted closer to us than to a tuna on the tree of life. So there are at least six major vertebrate groups if one counts the cartilaginous fishes. The illusion of relatedness among all fishes is partly attributable to the constraints of evolving to move efficiently in water. The density of water is about 800 times greater than that of air, so aquatic living has, in vertebrates, tended to favor streamlined shapes, muscular bodies, and flattened appendages (fins) that generate forward propulsion while minimizing drag. Living in a denser medium also greatly reduces the pull of gravity. The buoyant effect of water frees aquatic organisms from the ravages of weight on terrestrial creatures. Thus, the largest animals — the whales — live in water, not on land. These factors also help explain the small relative brain size (the ratio of brain weight to body weight) of most fishes, which has been used against them in our cerebrocentric view of other life forms. Fishes benefit from having large, powerful muscles to propel them through water, which is more resistant than air, and living in a practically weightless environment means there is no premium on limiting body size relative to brain size. In any event, brain size is only marginally meaningful in terms of cognitive advancement. As the author Sy Montgomery notes in an essay on octopus minds, it is well known in electronics that anything can be miniaturized. A small squid can learn mazes faster than dogs do, and a small goby fish can memorize in one trial the topography of a tide pool by swimming over it at high tide — a feat few if any humans could achieve. The earliest fishlike creatures arose in the Cambrian period, some 530 million years ago. They were small and not very exciting. The big breakthrough in the evolution of fishes (and all their descendants) was the appearance of jaws about 90 million years later in the Silurian period. Jaws allowed these pioneer vertebrates to grab and break up food items and to expand their heads to powerfully suck in prey, which greatly extended the available dinner menu. We might also think of jaws as nature's first Swiss Army knife, for they come with other functions, including manipulating objects, digging holes, carrying material to build nests, transporting and protecting young, transmitting sounds, and communicating (as in, don't come any closer or I'll bite you). Having jaws set the stage for an explosion of piscine life during the Devonian period — also known as "the age of fishes" — including the first super-predators. Most of the Devonian fishes were placoderms (plate-skinned), having heavy, bony armor over the head end and a cartilaginous skeleton. The largest placoderms were formidable. Some species of Dunkleosteus and Titanichthys measured well over thirty feet. They had no teeth, but could shear and crush with two pairs of sharp bony plates forming the jaws. Their fossils are often found with boluses of semi-digested fish bones, suggesting that they regurgitated these in the manner of modern owls. Although they all went out with the Devonian and have been gone for over 300 million years, nature was kind to the placoderms in preserving some specimens so delicately that paleontologists have been able to deduce some intriguing facets of their lives. One particularly revealing find, from the Gogo fossil sites of Western Australia, is Materpiscis attenboroughi (translation: Attenborough's mother fish), named for the iconic British nature documentary presenter David Attenborough, who waxed enthusiastic over this species in his 1979 documentary series Life on Earth. This perfectly preserved 3-D specimen allows careful peeling away of layers to reveal the insides of the fish. And what should show up there but a well-developed baby Materpiscis attenboroughi attached to its mother by an umbilical cord. This discovery rocked the evolutionary boat by setting back the origins of internal fertilization by 200 million years. It also eroticized the lives of early fishes. As far as we know there is only one way to achieve internal fertilization: sex with an intromittent organ. So it appears that fishes were the first to enjoy "the fun kind" of sex. About this discovery and John Long, the Australian paleontologist who brought it to light, Attenborough expressed ambivalence during a public lecture: "This is the first known example of any vertebrate copulating in the history of life ... and he names it after me." Sex notwithstanding, the bony fishes, which arose about the same time as the placoderms, had a brighter future. Although they suffered major losses during the third great extinction that closed out the Permian period, they steadily diversified over the next 150 million years of the Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous periods. Then, about 100 million years ago, they truly began to flourish. From that time to today the number of known families of bony fishes has more than quintupled. Fossil records do not divulge their secrets willingly, however, so there may be many earlier fish families still hidden in the rocks. Like their bony counterparts, the cartilaginous fishes also steadily recovered from the Permian setback, albeit without the explosive diversification of later times. As far as we know, there are more kinds of sharks and rays today than at any point in history. And we're beginning to discover that their real lives belie their pugnacious reputation. Diverse and Versatile Because their lives are more difficult to observe than those of most terrestrial animals, fishes are not easily fathomed. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, less than 5 percent of the world's oceans have been explored. The deep sea is the largest habitat on Earth, and most of the animals on this planet live there. A seven-month survey using echo soundings of the mesopelagic zone (between 100 and 1,000 meters — 330 to 3,300 feet — below the ocean surface), published in early 2014, concluded that there are between ten and thirty times more fishes living there than was previously thought. And why not? You might have encountered the popular notion that living at great depths is a terrible hardship for the creatures there. It's a shallow idea, for surely deep-sea creatures are no more inconvenienced by the enormous pressure of the overlying ocean than we are by the approximately ten-tons-per-square-meter pressure (often expressed as 14.7 pounds per square inch) of the atmosphere above us. As the ocean ecologist Tony Koslow explains in his book The Silent Deep, water is relatively incompressible, so deep-sea pressures have less impact than we usually think, because pressure from within the organism is about the same as that on the outside. Technology is just beginning to afford us a glimpse of the ocean depths, but even in reachable habitats many species remain undiscovered. Between 1997 and 2007, 279 new species of fishes were found in Asia's Mekong River basin alone. The year 2011 saw the discovery of four shark species. Given the current rate, experts predict the total count of all fishes will level off at around 35,000. With the advance of techniques for distinguishing species at the genetic level, I think it could be many thousands more than that. When I studied bats as a graduate student in the late 1980s, 800 species had been identified. Today, the count has ballooned to 1,300. From diversity springs variety, and from the rich variety of fishdom spring some noteworthy superlatives and bizarre life-history patterns. The smallest fish — indeed, the smallest vertebrate — is a tiny goby of one of the Philippine lakes of Luzon. Adult Pandaka pygmaea are only a third of an inch in length and weigh about 0.00015 of an ounce. If you were to put 300 of them on a scale they wouldn't equal the weight of an American penny. At less than half an inch, some male deep-sea anglerfishes are not much bigger, but what they lack in size they make up for in the sheer audacity of their mode of existence. On finding a female, males of some deep-sea anglerfish species latch their mouths onto her body and stay there for the remainder of their lives. It doesn't matter much where they fix their bite on the female — it could be on her abdomen or her head — they eventually become fused to her. Many times smaller, the male resembles little more than a modified fin, living off her blood supply and fertilizing her intravenously. One female may end up with three or more males sprouting from her body like vestigial limbs. It looks like a lurid form of sexual harassment; scientists have called it sexual parasitism. But the origins of this unconventional mating system are not so ignoble. It is estimated that female deep-sea anglerfishes occur at a density of about one per 800,000 cubic meters (28 million cubic feet) of water, which means a male is searching for a football-size object in a darkened space about the volume of a football stadium. Thus, it is desperately hard for anglerfishes to find each other in the vast darkness of the abyss, making it wise to hang on to your partner if you find one. At the time that Peter Greenwood and J. R. Norman revised A History of Fishes in 1975, no free-swimming adult male anglerfish had been found, leading ichthyologists to speculate that the only alternative to successful latching is death. But the University of Washington's Ted Pietsch — curator of fishes at the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, and the world's leading authority on deep-sea anglerfishes — tells me that there are now hundreds of (formerly) free-living males in specimen collections around the world. In exchange for the male being the ultimate couch potato, the female never has to wonder where her mate is on a Saturday evening. It turns out that some males do indeed amount to little more than an appendage. Another fish superlative is their fecundity, which is also unmatched among vertebrates. A single ling, five feet long and weighing fifty-four pounds, had 28,361,000 eggs in her ovaries. Even that pales compared to the 300 million eggs carried by an ocean sunfish, the largest of all bony fishes. That such a grand creature can be the product of such a paltry parental investment as a teeny egg released into the water column might contribute to the common bias that fishes are unworthy of our consideration. But it bears reminding that all living things start from a single cell. And as we'll see in the section on "Parenting Styles," parental care is well developed in many fishes. From its humble beginnings as an egg smaller than this letter "o," a mature adult ling can grow to be close to six feet long, and it is another superlative of fishes that they can increase so much in size from the start of their independent life cycle. But the growth champion among vertebrates may be the pointed-tailed ocean sunfish. While not streamlined (the family name, Molidae, refers to their millstone shape), they grow from one-tenth of an inch to ten feet in length, and can weigh 60 million times more as an adult. Sharks lie at the opposite end of the spectrum of fish fecundity. Some species reproduce at a rate of only one baby a year. And that's only after they reach sexual maturity, which for some species can take a quarter century or more. In parts of their range, spiny dogfish sharks — a heavily fished species that you might have dissected in a college biology course — average thirty-five years old before they are ready to breed. Sharks have a placental structure as complex as that of mammals. Pregnancies are few and far between, and gestation can be lengthy. Frilled sharks carry their babies for over three years, the longest known pregnancy in nature. I sure hope they don't get morning sickness. Dogfishes can't fly, nor can any other fishes, but they just might be the world's superlative for gliding. Best known of these are the flying fishes, of which there are about seventy species inhabiting the surfaces of the open ocean. Flying fishes have greatly enlarged pectoral fins that function as wings. In preparation for launch, they can reach speeds of forty miles per hour. Once airborne, the lower lobe of the tail may be dipped into the water and used as a supercharger to extend flights to 1,200 feet or more. Flights are usually just above the surface, but sometimes gusts of wind carry these aerialists fifteen to twenty feet high, which may explain why they sometimes land on ship decks. I wonder if the respiratory limitations of being a water breather have kept flying fishes from becoming truly flapping their "wings" for fully sustained flight? Fishes of several other types also launch themselves into the air, including the characins of South America and Africa, and — never mind that their name sounds more like a circus act — the flying gurnards. Speaking of superlatives, and names, surely one of the longest belongs to Hawaii's state fish, the rectangular triggerfish, known by the locals as humuhumunukunukuapua'a (translation: the fish that sews with a needle and grunts like a pig). Perhaps the award for least flattering name should go to an anglerfish dubbed the hairy-jawed sack-mouth, and for most preposterous to the sarcastic fringehead. For the title of crudest, I nominate a small coastal dweller, the slippery dick ( Halichoeres bivittatus ). But really, the most exciting breaking news on fishes is the steady stream of discoveries on how they think, feel, and live their lives. Scarcely a week now passes without a revealing new discovery of fish biology and behavior. Careful observations on reefs are uncovering nuanced social dynamics of cleaner–client fish mutualisms that defy the human conceit that fishes are dim-witted pea brains and slaves to instinct. And the notorious three-second fish memory has been debunked by simple laboratory investigations. In the pages ahead we'll explore how fishes are not just sentient, but aware, communicative, social, tool-using, virtuous, even Machiavellian. Lowly Not Among the vertebrate animals — mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fishes — it is the fishes that are the most alien to our sensibilities. Lacking detectable facial expressions and appearing mute, fishes are more easily dismissed than our fellow air breathers. Their place in human culture falls almost universally into two entwined contexts: (1) something to be caught, and (2) something to be eaten. Hooking and yanking them from the water has not just been seen as benign but as a symbol of all that's good about life. Fishing appears gratuitously in advertising, and the logo of one of America's most beloved film production studios, DreamWorks, features a Tom Sawyer-esque boy relaxing with a fishing pole. You may have met self-professed vegetarians who nonetheless eat fishes, as if there were no moral distinction between a cod and a cucumber. (Continues...) Excerpted from What a Fish Knows by Jonathan Balcombe . Copyright © 2016 Jonathan Balcombe. Excerpted by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A
  • New York Times
  • Bestseller
  • Do fishes think? Do they really have three-second memories? And can they recognize the humans who peer back at them from above the surface of the water? In
  • What a Fish Knows
  • , the myth-busting ethologist Jonathan Balcombe addresses these questions and more, taking us under the sea, through streams and estuaries, and to the other side of the aquarium glass to reveal the surprising capabilities of fishes. Although there are more than thirty thousand species of fish―more than all mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians combined―we rarely consider how individual fishes think, feel, and behave. Balcombe upends our assumptions about fishes, portraying them not as unfeeling, dead-eyed feeding machines but as sentient, aware, social, and even Machiavellian―in other words, much like us.
  • What a Fish Knows
  • draws on the latest science to present a fresh look at these remarkable creatures in all their breathtaking diversity and beauty. Fishes conduct elaborate courtship rituals and develop lifelong bonds with shoalmates. They also plan, hunt cooperatively, use tools, curry favor, deceive one another, and punish wrongdoers. We may imagine that fishes lead simple, fleeting lives―a mode of existence that boils down to a place on the food chain, rote spawning, and lots of aimless swimming. But, as Balcombe demonstrates, the truth is far richer and more complex, worthy of the grandest social novel. Highlighting breakthrough discoveries from fish enthusiasts and scientists around the world and pondering his own encounters with fishes, Balcombe examines the fascinating means by which fishes gain knowledge of the places they inhabit, from shallow tide pools to the deepest reaches of the ocean. Teeming with insights and exciting discoveries,
  • What a Fish Knows
  • offers a thoughtful appraisal of our relationships with fishes and inspires us to take a more enlightened view of the planet’s increasingly imperiled marine life.
  • What a Fish Knows
  • will forever change how we see our aquatic cousins―the pet goldfish included.

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Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Fishes are fascinating. Prepare for a great read.

Who would have thought that reading about fishes could be so entertaining and educational? After all, I was taught to believe that a fish is a fish is a fish is a fish, … just automatons peddling water waiting for food and sex, sex and food, food and sex, until they become food to other fishes. Other than different colors and shapes, their lives were unremarkable and just plain boring.

I was so wrong.

In opening Jonathan Balcombe’s book, I fell into "Alice in Wonderland" waters where the characters come to life, - but real life, in an underwater civilization that I didn’t know existed. I set aside all I thought I knew about fishes after reading Chapter 1 – The Misunderstood Fish - which challenged the teachings on which I had based my bias about them.

Balcombe first leads through the basics, the understanding of fishes’ senses of sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch and expanded to added senses of magnetic fields, electricity, and pressure.

Then his really challenging work begins: fishes’ pain, consciousness, awareness, stress, and joy followed by intelligence, tools, planning, and winning competitions with primates. Not one to hold back, Balcombe next leads us to the cultural pages of Fishdom with social contracts and societal cooperation, democracy, and peacekeeping.

Who knew?

I could relax my poor brain a bit when he finally ventured into the sex lives and parenting styles of fishes. (Gone was my long held belief that all female fishes let go of their eggs to wherever the waters took them.)

Before reading the last chapter, I braced myself for a round of proselytizing paragraphs on what is wrong about harming fish leading to a condemnation. But no, as a consummate scientist and brilliant writer, Balcombe simply lays out the facts clearly and calmly of how fishes and fish populations are suffering and how current human actions are irreparably damaging Earth’s underwater world. He has finished walking us through the science.

Now he leaves it up to us to decide what to do.
105 people found this helpful
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If you like fish, if you like watching them in a ...

If you like fish, if you like watching them in a fishbowl or in an aquarium or when snorkeling or scuba diving; if you like how beautiful some of them are, how weird others are, how strange their behaviors can get; you’ll like this book. You’ll like the breadth of his research, the lightness of his humor, his deep appreciation for fish (or “fishes” as he calls them, to help us understand their plurality and variety). You’ll like how he makes you think about them in new ways: their emotions, their senses, their consciousness, their life in community.

I like reading about play and games and imagination and playfulness and all things related. And when I'm not reading about those things, I like reading science fiction. I especially like those "first contact" stories when the heroes are trying to figure out how to communicate with an alien mind. It's a wonderful exercise of the imagination, just to imagine someone who thinks differently than you. It's also a wonderful exercise in compassion, and understanding children and your significant others and your boss. Reading Dr. Balcombe's book is like that. Like reading science fiction. Only it's science non-fiction.

You’ll be amazed at how much mind is present in the two-thirds of the world we’ve never considered in any other light than that of food and perhaps beauty. I’d advise, however, that you skip the last chapter.

If, on the other hand, you like fish because they taste good, or because catching them is good sport, and you don’t want to think about the lives, the uniqueness of the beings that you are taking away from their communities and habitats, you should still read this book. It will give you a different perspective on things. It will help you appreciate the cost of the gift of their lives that you are accepting. But you still shouldn’t read the last chapter.
You might flip the book open to, for example, page 84 of the chapter that begins with the question "do fish feel pain?" where Dr. Balcombe writes:

"Fishes show the hallmarks of pain both physiologically and behaviorally. They possess the specialized nerve fibers that mammals and birds use to detect noxious stimuli. They can learn to avoid electric shocks and anglers' hooks. They are cognitively impaired when subjected to nasty insults to their bodies, and this impairment can be reversed if they are provided with pain relief."

Yes, but do they have fun?

And so, we turn to page 97.

"This one (fish) seemed to have a destination. She would swim in one direction along the bottom (of the aquarium), then, on reaching the end of the tank, she swerved upward and swam to the surface. Arriving there, she was met by the current of the water pump, pushing the little traveler like a rocket back to the other side. There, she descended back to the bottom and started her circuit all over."

Finally, yes, if you’re the kind of person who wants to save lives, conscious lives, who wants to help create a better balance between our ever-growing, all-consuming appetite and the dwindling abundance of ways to satisfy those appetites; if you want to get angry, yes, by all means, read the whole book, every last word.
92 people found this helpful
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Jonathan Balcombe pioneers the exciting and exploding field of fish sentience :)

MASSIVELY excited to receive this beautiful book in the mail today. "What A Fish Knows", by Jonathan Balcombe, pioneers the exciting and exploding field of fish sentience. Dr. Balcombe is the Director for Animal Sentience at The Humane Society Institute for Science and Policy and is one of the planet's leading nonhuman animal behaviorists.

I never liked fishing, even as a small child. My gut instinct told me something was very wrong with this. But did that stop me from eating fish and crustaceans and other aquatic animals for 37 years? No. Our culture - which, as most of us now know, is heavily dictated by corporations and their lobbying and marketing agendas - brainwashed and desensitized me to the pain and suffering of these complex, social, feeling and highly aware beings. Just because they don't scream does not mean they don't suffer. We now know they do. Just because they don't look or act like us, does not mean that they don't experience the entire range of emotions just like us. We now know they do. It wasn't until I awoke from my slumber 8 years ago that I stopped eating aquatic animals. Now when I dive and snorkel, we are equals.

Fish have just as much of a right to be here as you and me; and they also have just as much of a right to live free and to live free from suffering as you and me. The root of injustice lies in discrimination, and discrimination against other species is no different. Speciesism has caused more pain and suffering and death, by leaps and bounds, than any other form of discrimination in history. It feels good to not cause unnecessary suffering. If you stop eating animals, I am quite certain you will agree.
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An Entertaining Book with a Profoundly Important Message

I am so grateful to Dr. Balcombe for this highly informative, insightful and utterly readable journey into piscene sentience. I urge anyone who cares about life on this planet, and has empathy for other living non-human creatures - fish in particular - to read it and to buy copies for your friends.

Dr. Balcombe's thoughtful collection of research and anecdotes solidly validates what we scuba divers and others who have interacted with fish have long known in our bones: that fish are fully conscious, feeling creatures - no less so than creatures who walk the land. They protect their nests, are often loyal to their mates, recognize members of their clan, hunt with intent, strategy and sometimes cooperation; know fear, know pleasure. No one can doubt this who has ever watched a fish cleaning station, or, who has ever experienced a grouper come up from the depths and go into a cleaning pose just for a gentle human chin scratch. They find both purpose and pleasure in touch.

We humans have determinedly objectified and commoditized fish, along with crustaceans other sea creatures. That makes more acceptable, the stunning scale and methods of our harvest and 'processing.' In trawlers laden with many millions of dying fish trapped or vacuumed from the sea, we cannot imagine individual lives. We 'fish' their mating aggregations, depriving them of adequate chance to balance their populations; we leave monofilament death traps throughout the world's oceans, while causing species to collapse one after the next. Then, we scale or skin them alive if it adds efficiency to our industry. And just for fun, there's that all American sport of fishing. We might "kindly" release these poor creatures after giving a human the "thrill of the catch" - but only after piercing holes in their faces, mouths and eyes, maiming them for life. Who can imagine there is no pain for the animal in this 'sporting' activity?

So, yes, thank you Dr. Balcombe for putting it out there in such a credible, accessible book: these creatures are not solely the objects or the commodities that would more comfortably fit our paradigm of blithely emptying our rivers, lakes and oceans of them to fill the insatiable and ever growing human appetite. Rather, however inconveniently for us, they really do have a conscious life and they really do feel pleasure as well as all of the pain and misery that humans inflict upon them.

Perhaps, finally, the scientific community is coming away from long ridiculing animal sentience as stilly anthropomorphism, and understanding that we are all from the same basic ancestry, if a ways back - with the same basic structures within us. It seems with each passing day, another discovery reveals - surprise! - what we have in common - even with creatures who live very different lives, in very different environments. if as Dr. Balcombe relates, drugs that agitate or relax have the same effect on a fish as they do on a human - well, maybe a neuron is a neuron, after all.

Dr. Balcombe's book is a terrific contribution to appreciating what is in our midst. It encourages me to imagine that at some point before its too late, we will respect and more profoundly appreciate our fellow travelers on this glorious blue orb - whatever their form, and whatever their habitat, watery or otherwise. This book steps us in that direction. I.e., that we might just yet come to appreciate, on the one hand, how closely they are kin, while on the other, appreciate their having evolved capabilities, senses and experiences exquisite to their situation that we will never have, and may never fully know. Let us come to realize these things before we pull every last one out of the water.
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Profound Game-Changer that Raises the Moral Status of Fishes from this Day Forward

Jonathan Balcombe’s brilliant “What a Fish Knows” is a profound game-changer for raising the moral status and consequent consideration of the welfare of fishes from this day forward. It’s a fantastic contribution to the transformation of consciousness towards a vegan world in which fishes are respected and treated as sentient individuals with lives that matter. Dr. Balcombe did an excellent job of making the science come to life. Reading this book, I really felt the “humanity” of fishes for the first time in my life.
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A great Surprise!

This book is so startling that it has changed my entire view not just of fishes but of many animals that we traditionally have thought of as "dumb." It has been one of those "the scales fell from my eyes" experiences. Jonathan Balcombe is a national treasure (well informed, caring and passionate about the animals he has studied.)and I am eager to read his other books. I wish this book was available in every pet store that sells fish so that everyone could understand how amazing they are. They recognize us; they have "friends;" they have preferences; and most of all they have feelings. I could not recommend this book more highly.
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very informative and easy to read

A bit too technical for me, however, very informative and easy to read.
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Read this book. You won’t look at a fish the same way again.

What A Fish Knows: The Inner Lives of Our Underwater Cousins by Jonathan Balcombe is of the most enlightening books I have ever read, and the one that made me view the world of fish with respect, humility and astonishment.

Do you know that fishes perceive optical illusions just like us? Do you know that they can actually learn certain skills faster than a four-year old child or an adult chimpanzee can? Do you know that fishes can feel fear?

We never think about fishes like other animals. Although we humans, mammals, birds and fishes are all vertebrates sharing a backbone that supports the body and the head, the human skeleton has much more in common with animals than fish. We can recognize the skull, forelimbs, hind limbs and many other features in our animal cousins, but not in fishes. Perhaps these are some of the reasons why we do not think about fishes as our distant cousins, and treat them as organisms without feelings when we catch and eat them. Of course, fishes can’t scream in pain. “Crying out in pain is as ineffective for a fish in air as crying out in pain is for us when we are submerged,” says Balcombe, who is the voice for our voiceless underwater cousins.

What a Fish Knows will change the way you view fishes and their world. After reading it, you won’t be the same person. In writing this book, Balcombe did not venture into the realm of speculation and did not let his emotions cloud his writing. He based his arguments on decades of research and relies on science and facts, while engaging the reader with anecdotes and stories. The book is organized into thoughtful, logical chapters: “What a Fish Perceives,” “What a Fish Feels,” “What a Fish Thinks,” “What a Fish Knows,” and “How a Fish Breeds. The book, in vivid terms, explains fishes’ social life, playfulness, mastery in the use of tools, symbiotic relationship with other underwater creatures, sex-changing behaviors, and much more. You will be amazed to find that fishes have great memory, as well as unique personalities. The lives of our underwater cousins are very rich and full of surprises.

Fishes don’t have eyelids, and their eyes are always open. Our eyes are shut tight when it comes to fishes. This book will open your eyes, show a glimpse of their world, and teach you a lot more than what you will ever learn about fishes from any other resource in your lifetime. Read this book. You won’t look at a fish the same way again. You may never even want to catch or eat one again.
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A trove of information and insight

When it comes to fish, what is fact and what is myth? If you’ve ever wondered about life in the underwater world, this book will teach you a lot, from fascinating facts like tapetum lucidum—the layer of the retina that enables marine creatures to see at night and is also responsible for creating the eyeshine in the eyes of cats and dogs—to the complexity of fish feeling. There are more species of fish than of all other vertebrates—mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians—combined, yet they’re a mystery to us. Not after reading this book.

Jonathan Balcombe speaks about fishes intelligently, eloquently, and passionately. He discusses the plight of fish and the steps that we can each take to make a difference, including reconsidering our consumption of fish. The book is a trove of information and insight.
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This book is wonderfully written, full of scientific data

The timing for the release of this book auspicious for me since I just stocked some of my ponds with goldfish. Reading this book has refreshingly opened up a new world when observing and dealing with them. Rather than see them as programmed robots I now I see them as animals equal in many respects to mammals. I see them play, socialize to the point of intimacy, problem-solve (how to maneuver around a wall), etc. This book is wonderfully written, full of scientific data, and humanizing anecdotes, all sprinkled with humor and a sense of awe. Great read.
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