Innovative behaviour in fish: Atlantic cod can learn to use an external tag to manipulate a self-feeder

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Abstract

This study describes how three individual fish, Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua L.), developed a novel behaviour and learnt to use a dorsally attached external tag to activate a self-feeder. This behaviour was repeated up to several hundred times, and over time these fish fine-tuned the behaviour and made a series of goal-directed coordinated movements needed to attach the feeder's pull string to the tag and stretch the string until the feeder was activated. These observations demonstrate a capacity in cod to develop a novel behaviour utilizing an attached tag as a tool to achieve a goal. This may be seen as one of the very few observed examples of innovation and tool use in fish. © 2013 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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Millot, S., Nilsson, J., Fosseidengen, J. E., Bégout, M. L., Fernö, A., Braithwaite, V. A., & Kristiansen, T. S. (2014). Innovative behaviour in fish: Atlantic cod can learn to use an external tag to manipulate a self-feeder. Animal Cognition, 17(3), 779–785. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-013-0710-3

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