ABSTRACT
Preference tests have usually been used to identify nonhuman animal preferences for welfare purposes (environmental enrichment), but they are mostly at the group level—that is, group preferences for resources or environmental conditions. However, a more robust method was developed to analyze animal preference, and this method detected clear individual variation in preferences of Nile tilapia fish (Oreochromis niloticus) selecting different background colors. Here, a clear individual variability of preference was found for another type of enrichment—the sizes of substrate. Despite this variability, a consistent response was detected at the group level: Small gravel was less frequently preferred than avoided, and the more decided fish (those who preferred only one substrate size) never preferred gravel over sand-size substrate. That is, Nile tilapia avoided gravel and preferred smaller substrate, and this finding was possibly associated with their mouth gap. Considering that small gravel is a substrate often used for fish rearing, these findings highlight fish keepers’ incorrect perception of fish needs, based mostly on arbitrary criteria instead of actual fish preferences and without considering individual needs.
Acknowledgments
We thank José Maia Filho for his help with the arrangement of the test apparatuses and Elisabeth Aparecida M. Maia for her help in registering behavioral data from video records. All experimental procedures are in accordance with Brazilian legislation regulated by the National Council for the Control of Animal Experimentation (CONCEA) and were approved by the Bioscience Institute/UNESP Ethics Committee on Animal Experimentation (CEEA) (protocol #220).