copps
Premium Member
John, this is hormonal drive and is directly involved in sexual selection. The sight of the other fish is not what causes the change, but the hormonal variation trigger by the other fishes presence. That is the cue, not the visual indication. This is my point. Bring it full circle back to the original fish in question, if stress from predation is the visual cue, what is the actual mechanism for lack of production of the lenin to make the spot? Is it hormonal? And if so, what hormone would only be produced by the appearance of a generalized "predator"? In the angelfish and clownfish comparison, the social interaction stimuliates an redorductive endocrine response, which causes the morphologic alteration.
Okay good... so you agree on that... I am not arguing that the sight of the predator is what causes it... I'm just arguing that something is causing it related to that... so you agree social interaction and "other fishes presence" can stimulate a color change in angels, as happens with sexual dichromatism? Why is it now such a great jump that other social interactions and other fishes presence may trigger chromatic change?