WASHINGTON—Baby tropical fish, drifting at the mercy of ocean
currents, probably follow their noses back to their home reefs when they grow
large enough to swim, researchers said on Monday.
Fish that dwell on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef generally
like to stick close to home, where they know where to find food and hide from
predators.
But in their first few weeks of life, lacking the ability to
swim, larval fish can drift up to 20 miles from where they were born. They
likely rely on their sense of smell to make their way back home, according to
scientists at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts.
Much as subway riders look for signs to make sure they are on
the right train, the fish use smell to find an ocean current, several of the
facility’s biologists found.
"Fish have as good a nose as anybody," said Jelle Atema, a
professor at Boston University and Woods Hole who took part in the research.
"You think of dogs and rats as super smellers but eels and catfish and
hammerhead sharks are at least as good."
The cardinal fish, popular in home aquariums, prefers to stay
on the reef on which it was born and uses its nose to distinguish one reef from
another, he said.
The neon damselfish, another popular aquarium species found
throughout the Pacific, is not as picky and can live on several reefs. This fish
uses its sense of smell to find its way back to safety when it drifts toward the
open ocean, Atema said.
The biologists were not able to prove conclusively that fish
navigate by smell, but Atema said their sense of hearing would not help them in
distances over half a mile.
The findings will be published this week in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.