Science Ugly Fish Don't Get The Conservation They Need

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Never judge a book by its cover — it's a principle we would like others to apply to us. But we do often judge others by their looks and a new study has found that our inclination to judge based on appearances also extends to the oceans.

The species of reef fishes that people find least beautiful tend not to be prioritized for conservation support, says the study published in the journal PLOS Biology. But it's "ugly" fish and the ecosystems they support that need conservation most.
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The bluefish (Pomatomus saltatrix) was deemed one of the more unattractive reef species.

Researchers at the University of Montpellier in France say they found that species ranked as more attractive tend to be less distinctive in terms of their ecological traits and evolutionary history.

HOW THEY RANKED BEAUTIFUL AND 'UGLY' FISH​

The researchers used an online survey to ask 13,000 members of the public to rate the aesthetic attractiveness of more than 480 photographs of ray-finned reef fishes — fishes being different species of fish.

Then they used the information from the survey to train an artificial intelligence technology, known as a convolutional neural network, to respond to yet more images in a similar way to the participants of the survey.

Once trained, the AI generated predictions — or aesthetic assessments — for an additional 4,400 photographs, featuring 2,417 of the most common reef fish species.

WHY 'UGLY' FISH NEED CONSERVATION​

When the public's ratings were combined with the AI's predictions, the scientists found that bright colorful fish species with rounder bodies tended to be rated as the most beautiful.

That does not bode well for "ugly" fish species or support from the public for conservation, say the researchers.

The study says that the ecological and evolutionary distinctiveness of unattractive fishes makes them important for the functioning of an entire reef and their loss — through a lack of conservation, for instance — could affect these ecosystems high in biodiversity.

Species listed on a so-called Red List as threatened, or species whose conservation status has yet to be evaluated, had a lower aesthetic value on average than species categorized as of "least concern," say the researchers.

The Red List is maintained by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

WHAT HUMANS FIND 'BEAUTIFUL'​

Nicolas Mouquet, an ecologist and lead author on the study, told DW that neuroaesthetic studies had shown that certain images tend to be judged as beautiful more than others.

For instance, when elements of an image can be removed from their background or visual features of a subject can be grouped into recognizable objects, that can trigger a sense of aesthetic pleasure in our minds.

The study authors say that our preferences for shape and color, including when we look at fish, may be due to the way the human brain processes colors and patterns.

But there is a mismatch between our sense of aesthetic value, a species' ecological function and its vulnerability to extinction. That, according to the study, means that when it comes to conservation, less attractive species may miss out on public support.

AVOID BIAS WITH BETTER COMMUNICATION​

Human bias for aesthetically pleasing groups of animals is common.

"Our study highlights important mismatches between potential public support for conservation and the species most in need of this support," said Mouquet, adding that unattractive species also had greater commercial interest.

Mouquet said he hoped researchers would collectively minimize the impact of human perception biases through better communication with the public, policymakers and conservation groups.
 
None of the fish images they show examples of are remotely ugly what the fuck I was expecting some freak of nature sealife like the bobbit worm. Fuck the bobbit worm for real. I don't view normal ass stereotypical metallic fish as ugly, that'd be fucking stupid.
 
None of the fish images they show examples of are remotely ugly what the fuck I was expecting some freak of nature sealife like the bobbit worm. Fuck the bobbit worm for real. I don't view normal ass stereotypical metallic fish as ugly, that'd be fucking stupid.
I know right! Those are some fine ass fish, the first one even got those sexy blowjob lips...
 
None of the fish images they show examples of are remotely ugly what the fuck I was expecting some freak of nature sealife like the bobbit worm. Fuck the bobbit worm for real. I don't view normal ass stereotypical metallic fish as ugly, that'd be fucking stupid.
You seen how shiny and sparkly those boys are?

Now. Penut worm
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None of the fish images they show examples of are remotely ugly what the fuck I was expecting some freak of nature sealife like the bobbit worm. Fuck the bobbit worm for real. I don't view normal ass stereotypical metallic fish as ugly, that'd be fucking stupid.
Its an article about "ugly fish" yet there is nothing from the abyssal zone of the ocean. These animal look far more prettier then whatever rejected aquatic horror monsters are at the bottom of the sea. I could see why people wouldn't want to conserve them, but I'd say everything featured here appear to be pretty "normal looking".
 
This actually is somewhat of a real problem. My sister worked at a zoo and told me the vast majority of donations for new exhibits and upkeep goes to the cute animals. She said the Red Panda exhibit was constantly getting donations and renovated because of how cute they were, while the uglier animals such as raptors and hawks were still waiting on upgrades to their exhibits. Humans will throw millions of dollars to save genetic dead-ends like Giant Pandas and Koalas because they are cute but vital parts of the ecosystem like frogs and sharks are SOL.
 
This is one of several reasons I'm extremely skeptical of charities. I once spent almost a full day researching these grifters because I had to direct a donation and every single conservation group was all about saving the fucking lion, the elephants, the bottlenose dolphin. Of course not the critically endangered chinese freshwater dolphin (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baiji) or some weird lion subspecies, just the generic stuff every zoo has. In the end I chose an ocean conservation group I forget the name of but I wasn't sold on them either.
 
Its an article about "ugly fish" yet there is nothing from the abyssal zone of the ocean. These animal look far more prettier then whatever rejected aquatic horror monsters are at the bottom of the sea. I could see why people wouldn't want to conserve them, but I'd say everything featured here appear to be pretty "normal looking".
One of the reasons deep sea fish look like monsters is because they lose their shape when they are brought to the surface.

Anglerfish are all femdoms though. They rule.
 
This actually is somewhat of a real problem. My sister worked at a zoo and told me the vast majority of donations for new exhibits and upkeep goes to the cute animals. She said the Red Panda exhibit was constantly getting donations and renovated because of how cute they were, while the uglier animals such as raptors and hawks were still waiting on upgrades to their exhibits. Humans will throw millions of dollars to save genetic dead-ends like Giant Pandas and Koalas because they are cute but vital parts of the ecosystem like frogs and sharks are SOL.
Giant Pandas, Koalas and Red Pandas are proof evolution can fail. They're cute but by God if not for human intervention they would rightfully be extinct.
 
This actually is somewhat of a real problem. My sister worked at a zoo and told me the vast majority of donations for new exhibits and upkeep goes to the cute animals. She said the Red Panda exhibit was constantly getting donations and renovated because of how cute they were, while the uglier animals such as raptors and hawks were still waiting on upgrades to their exhibits. Humans will throw millions of dollars to save genetic dead-ends like Giant Pandas and Koalas because they are cute but vital parts of the ecosystem like frogs and sharks are SOL.
I was going to say a similar thing to you that "cute" and "marketable" animals get all the attention and conservation efforts but a lot of cool animals like crocodiles sharks and yes ugly fish get fucked because they're not marketable enough
 
This actually is somewhat of a real problem. My sister worked at a zoo and told me the vast majority of donations for new exhibits and upkeep goes to the cute animals. She said the Red Panda exhibit was constantly getting donations and renovated because of how cute they were, while the uglier animals such as raptors and hawks were still waiting on upgrades to their exhibits. Humans will throw millions of dollars to save genetic dead-ends like Giant Pandas and Koalas because they are cute but vital parts of the ecosystem like frogs and sharks are SOL.
Why not just use the cute animals donations to renovate the entire park?
 
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Why not just use the cute animals donations to renovate the entire park?
Asked her the same thing. Legally the zoo has to use the money as the donor wishes. If a donor wants them to spend 1 million dollars on the Red Pandas then that money has to be spent on the Red Pandas. They can't just spend five bucks to buy them a new ball to play with and use the rest of the money for upkeep on other exhibits.
 
People cannot distinguish between threatened ugly fish and hundreds of species of similar-looking but non-threatened ugly fishes. Mystery solved.
 
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