Antipredatory Behavior of Zebrafish: Adaptive Function and a Tool for Translational Research

The zebrafish is gaining popularity in behavioral brain research. It may be a cost-effective tool with which we can improve our understanding of the biological and genetic mechanisms of human brain function and dysfunction. Some, myself and collaborators included, have argued that such translational...

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Main Author: Robert Gerlai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2013-07-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491301100308
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spelling doaj-74f80935d975453cb32843742eadac262020-11-25T03:08:25ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492013-07-011110.1177/14747049130110030810.1177_147470491301100308Antipredatory Behavior of Zebrafish: Adaptive Function and a Tool for Translational ResearchRobert GerlaiThe zebrafish is gaining popularity in behavioral brain research. It may be a cost-effective tool with which we can improve our understanding of the biological and genetic mechanisms of human brain function and dysfunction. Some, myself and collaborators included, have argued that such translational relevance may be best achieved if one considers the ecology and species-specific characteristics of the study organism. In this review, I focus on our own studies investigating zebrafish fear responses, which may be utilized in analyzing the mechanisms of fear and anxiety, and which may be used for screening anxiolytic drugs. I review how zebrafish respond to their natural and synthetic alarm substance as well as to other fear-inducing stimuli, including sympatric and allopatric predatory fish, sympatric or allopatric harmless fish, moving (animated) images of predatory fish and moving images of abstract shapes. I discuss the behavioral responses these stimuli elicit, summarize the methods of the quantification of the behaviors, and speculate about their possible adaptive nature. Although we utilize complex visual stimuli and do not yet know what key features zebrafish may be sensitive to, our results, together with those published by others, imply that this simple vertebrate may have a bright future in behavioral brain research.https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491301100308
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Gerlai
spellingShingle Robert Gerlai
Antipredatory Behavior of Zebrafish: Adaptive Function and a Tool for Translational Research
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Robert Gerlai
author_sort Robert Gerlai
title Antipredatory Behavior of Zebrafish: Adaptive Function and a Tool for Translational Research
title_short Antipredatory Behavior of Zebrafish: Adaptive Function and a Tool for Translational Research
title_full Antipredatory Behavior of Zebrafish: Adaptive Function and a Tool for Translational Research
title_fullStr Antipredatory Behavior of Zebrafish: Adaptive Function and a Tool for Translational Research
title_full_unstemmed Antipredatory Behavior of Zebrafish: Adaptive Function and a Tool for Translational Research
title_sort antipredatory behavior of zebrafish: adaptive function and a tool for translational research
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2013-07-01
description The zebrafish is gaining popularity in behavioral brain research. It may be a cost-effective tool with which we can improve our understanding of the biological and genetic mechanisms of human brain function and dysfunction. Some, myself and collaborators included, have argued that such translational relevance may be best achieved if one considers the ecology and species-specific characteristics of the study organism. In this review, I focus on our own studies investigating zebrafish fear responses, which may be utilized in analyzing the mechanisms of fear and anxiety, and which may be used for screening anxiolytic drugs. I review how zebrafish respond to their natural and synthetic alarm substance as well as to other fear-inducing stimuli, including sympatric and allopatric predatory fish, sympatric or allopatric harmless fish, moving (animated) images of predatory fish and moving images of abstract shapes. I discuss the behavioral responses these stimuli elicit, summarize the methods of the quantification of the behaviors, and speculate about their possible adaptive nature. Although we utilize complex visual stimuli and do not yet know what key features zebrafish may be sensitive to, our results, together with those published by others, imply that this simple vertebrate may have a bright future in behavioral brain research.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491301100308
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