What a Fish Knows Audiobook By Jonathan Balcombe cover art

What a Fish Knows

The Inner Lives of Our Underwater Cousins

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What a Fish Knows

By: Jonathan Balcombe
Narrated by: Graham Winton
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An underwater exploration that overturns myths about fishes and reveals their complex lives, from tool use to social behavior.

There are more than 30,000 species of fish - more than all mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians combined. But for all their breathtaking diversity and beauty, we rarely consider how fish think, feel, and behave.

In What a Fish Knows, ethologist Jonathan Balcombe takes us under the sea and to the other side of the aquarium glass to reveal what fishes can do, how they do it, and why. Introducing the latest revelations in animal behavior and biology, Balcombe upends our assumptions about fish, exposing them not as unfeeling, dead-eyed creatures but as sentient, aware, social - even Machiavellian. They conduct elaborate courtship rituals and develop lifelong bonds with shoalmates. They also plan, hunt cooperatively, use tools, punish wrongdoers, curry favor, and deceive one another. Fish possess sophisticated senses that rival our own. The reef-dwelling damselfish identifies its brethren by face patterns visible only in ultraviolet light, and some species communicate among themselves in murky waters using electric signals.

Highlighting these breakthrough discoveries and others from his own encounters with fish, Balcombe inspires a more enlightened appraisal of marine life. An illuminating journey into the world of underwater science, What a Fish Knows will forever change your view of our aquatic cousins - your pet goldfish included.

©2016 Jonathan Balcombe (P)2016 Recorded Books
Biological Sciences Animals Science Thought-Provoking Outdoors & Nature
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who would have thought a book about fish would be so interesting. it covers everything from how fish evolved to are they sentient beings to the ecologic perils fish face. A good listen

surprisingly interesting

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This book really made me see fish in an entirely different light. Backed by many research studies, the author indicates that fish can feel pain, have a much better memory and intelligence than they are given credit for, have individual personalities, and may even be capable of complex emotions! High school students should read this and maybe the way we treat fish can be reconsidered. I will certainly look at my aquarium denizens differently! Definitely worth a credit.

A New View of Fish

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I'm not sure I can completely buy into the subtitle of this book: The Inner Lives of Our Underwater Cousins, but Jonathan Balcombe gives the reader plenty of reasons why What a Fish Knows is much more than we have previously thought. From frillfins exhibiting that they are able to form memories of tide pool layouts and recall them to avoid predators, to tool use by the orange-dotted tusk fish, and so many more species, the author presents a myriad of elegantly designed studies and interesting evidence to show that we have been underestimating fish. He examines their senses, intelligence, family and social lives, along with many reasons why we should no longer think of them as “just fish”. Their ability to receive and perceive visual information from above the water level and below it at the same time is fascinating to me, and something I would like to better understand on a neurological level, along with the lateral lines of the bony fish that allow them to sense water pressure. Fish comprise approximately 60% of all vertebrates, and there are more than 30,000 species of fish, and Balcombe argues that we should consider all of them as worthy and sentient individuals. The chapter on piscine feelings (From Stress to Joy) began to sound a bit unscientific to me, but the author presents intriguing information in the rest of the book in such an entertaining way that I will most likely re-read this wonderful book.

Fish Know Much More Than We Thought.

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Enjoyed this book on all about fish. Keeping tropical fish, this book helped me better understand my fish friends.

Fishes

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So, my adventure through another scientific romp through the watery world. I seriously cannot escape science without things being billions of years old on a planet that isn’t really old at all even say still kinda young all things considered. I get that I need to learn everything there is to know about The Oceans but I still cannot abide by the widely accepted beliefs but know that I also have beliefs which counter interact with all scientists chatting on and on about evolution a now debunked theory that is just that. A Theory. Anyways the deep dive into the lives of several fish species.

I found it odd the narrator and ergo the author describes fish groups or a bunch as fishes. Sure each usage is acceptable but what I also know is fish is a universal term like all fish are fish akin to how you describe deer, moose, elk and various animals with no right or wrong way to say the plural word for fish. Fishes is acceptable but fish is also acceptable.

One of these days I am going to be an Ocean Expert or even a Master. However my differing ideas about the Oceanic world have me concerned that my beliefs could be accepted by the scientific community or laughed out of the scientific community as evolution and creation paint fish in different light. Carbon dating is not an accurate source of determining the time and age of things. Probability of this being new science fact not fiction changes the historical and biological world. Book wasn’t bad just I wish science would have a serious chat about the probability or possibly of creative design. I wish to approach marine biology different than everybody a bold crusade in my eyes.

Plenty of Fish In The Sea…

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