CrowdScience

Do fish know what they look like?

Jan 23, 2026
Professor Alex Jordan, an evolutionary biologist who studies animal cognition, explains the mirror‑test methods. Professor Culum Brown, leader of Macquarie’s Fish Lab, explores smell and recognition. Dr Lauren Nadler, a reef fish social behavior researcher, examines shoaling and stress. They discuss visual and olfactory cues, individual odour signatures, imprinting, and whether mirror-test results mean fish recognize themselves.
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INSIGHT

Vision And Smell Work Together

  • Blue-green chromis and similar social fish use both vision and smell to recognise group members.
  • Lauren Nadler showed visual and olfactory cues together reduce metabolic rate by ~25%, indicating a calming social effect.
INSIGHT

Smell Solves The Oddity Problem

  • Fish in large shoals aim to look similar to confuse predators, making smell crucial for individual recognition.
  • Individuals carry unique scent profiles that help distinguish kin, familiar members, and similar-habitat fish.
ADVICE

Test Multiple Cues Separately

  • To study recognition, consider multiple cues: visual appearance, odour profiles, diet and habitat influences.
  • Experimental designs should isolate visual vs olfactory cues to determine their relative roles in social recognition.
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