What Fish ‘Want’ and ‘Like’: Yet Another Perspective on Fish Welfare
Abstrak
ABSTRACT In this viewpoint, we highlight two issues that we believe deserve more emphasize in the ongoing discussions on fish welfare. On the basis of the naturally or artificially selected proximate behavioural mechanism, an animal today may attempt to reach goals that are not necessarily equal to the functions that yielded higher fitness in the past process of evolution. These attempts lead to proximate ‘needs’ of animals. Accordingly, we can increase fish welfare by asking what goals fish are trying to reach (‘wanting’) and which results will satisfy their resulting needs (‘liking’). This can be done independently of the hard question about their subjective experiences. Because answering such questions of wanting and liking relies on highly experimental procedures, we should additionally think about approaches to assess fish welfare in practice in a way that goes beyond health aspects, too. Recently developed techniques open exciting avenues to tap into judgement biases of populations that may indicate welfare and may be applicable in large‐scale fish production systems. Being aware of these two issues hopefully helps to temper the conflict between the two current extreme poles of either negating or assuming a high level of fish sentience in the discussion of fish welfare.
Penulis (3)
Lorenz Gygax
Lars Christian Gansel
Edna Hillmann
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2025
- Bahasa
- en
- Sumber Database
- CrossRef
- DOI
- 10.1002/aff2.70147
- Akses
- Open Access ✓