July 2021

Page 87

Science and the

Sea

WITH G A M E E E R F G ET SE! A H C R U P Y P H AR D CO onth subscripTM

receive a 12-m Order today and ry and sign up family memur tion for $25.00. H iends at the same rate! fr or d/ bers an

All in the Family You’ve probably heard that birds of a feather flock together. It turns out the same may be true for reef fish called emerald coral gobies. These fish live in small groups that include a single breeding pair and a host of subordinates who are ready to step in and take over as the male or female breeder if one of them dies. Scientists have learned from past research that these non-breeding subordinate gobies stick around in each group because being together offers them safety. The remaining question was why the larger breeders were willing to share space and resources with the hangers-on.

SUBSCRIPTION

Emerald coral gobies can return to their “home” reefs. Credit: Christian Gloor / Flickr CC BY 2.0 Genetic analysis of 73 gobies from 16 groups in Kimbe Bay, Papua New Guinea revealed the likely reason—family loyalty. Biologists discovered that gobies in each group were more related to one another than to gobies in other groups on the same reef. Further, gobies at the same reef were more related to one another than to gobies at other reefs. This might sound unsurprising at first—except that gobies, like many reef fish, don’t spend their early lives on a reef at all, much less the reef where their parents live. Instead, goby larvae ride the currents of the open ocean for several weeks, where they’re less likely to be targets of hungry predators. Previous research has suggested goby larvae can choose the currents they ride so they can return to their “home” reef.

FORM

SUB0721

To order subscriptions simply fill this form out below and mail it to the address below, fax, email or go online. 361-785-3420 Monday – Friday 7:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. 361-792-4530

FREE E-MAG WITH HARDCOPY PURCHASE E-mail required

Putting all these findings from different studies together, scientists are getting a fuller picture of the lives of these reef fish. It seems their larvae return to the reef they came from, find a group of kin, and stay with them for safety, even if it means sharing food and other resources. Emerald coral gobies keep it all in the family.

AM EX

www.ScienceAndTheSea.org © The University of Texas Marine Science Institute

12 months print - $25.00 12 months digital only - $12.00 24 months print - $45.00

Auto Renewal available with all subscriptions!

Subscribing for more than yourself? Please write additional information on a separate sheet of paper.

TSFMAG.com | 85


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.