logo
The curious case of the shrinking clownfish

The curious case of the shrinking clownfish

Vox23-05-2025

is an environmental correspondent at Vox, covering biodiversity loss and climate change. Before joining Vox, he was a senior energy reporter at Business Insider. Benji previously worked as a wildlife researcher.
During a severe heat wave in 2023, scientists scuba-diving off the coast of Papua New Guinea captured clownfish to measure their bodies. Between February and August, they calculated the length of 134 of these iconic, orange and white fish once a month, taking a total of six measurements for each fish.
Those measurements revealed something peculiar: Most of the fish shrank.
This week, the researchers reported their findings in Science Advances, concluding that the fish got shorter — on the scale of a few millimeters, or a small, single-digit percent of their length — in response to the heat wave.
Morgan Bennett-Smith
'We were so surprised to see shrinking in these fish that, to be sure, we measured each fish individual repeatedly over a period of five months,' said Melissa Versteeg, a doctoral researcher at Newcastle University, who led the study in collaboration with Mahonia Na Dari, an environmental organization, and Walindi Resort. 'In the end, we discovered [that downsizing] was very common in this population.'
Versteeg and her colleagues don't know how, exactly, the fish are shrinking — one untested idea is that the fish might be reabsorbing some of their bone material or tissue. But getting smaller isn't a problem. In fact, the study found, it may be an adaptation to help clownfish survive hotter ocean temperatures.
Credit: Morgan Bennett-Smith
When it's good to be small
Last year, the planet was about 2.65 degrees warmer than it was in the late 1800s. This level of warming impacts wild animals in a number of strange, mostly bad, ways, from fueling koala-killing wildfires to causing corals to bleach and then starve.
Related This is how many animals could go extinct from climate change
But rising temperatures also appear to be making many species smaller. One especially striking study, published in 2019, found that birds shrank by an average of about 2.6 percent between 1978 and 2016. More recent analyses have linked rising temperatures to a reduction in body size of small mammals in North America and marine fish. Most of these existing studies report that animals, on average, are simply not growing as large.
The new study on clownfish, however, suggests individual fish are shrinking over mere weeks in response to a heat wave, which, in the case of the Papua New Guinea event, pushed temperatures in the bay about 7 degrees (4 degrees Celsius) above average.
Why do they do this?
Being tiny has its advantages in a hot climate: Warm-blooded animals, like mammals, shed heat more easily when they're small and this helps them cool down. The benefits for cold-blooded creatures, such as clownfish, aren't as clear, though researchers think they may have an easier time meeting their bodies' energy requirements when they're small.
Credit: Morgan Bennett-Smith
Regardless of the reason, being small seems to help clownfish when it's hot. The fish that shrank, the study found, had a much higher chance of surviving.
'It was a surprise to see how rapidly clownfish can adapt to a changing environment,' Versteeg said. 'We witnessed how flexibly they regulated their size, as individuals and as breeding pairs, in response to heat stress as a successful technique to help them survive.'
The study adds a layer of complexity to what is otherwise a depressing tale about the world's oceans. Heat waves linked to climate change, like the one that occurred during this study, are utterly devastating coral reefs — and in severe cases, are nearly wiping out entire reef sections. These colorful ecosystems are home to countless marine animals, including those we eat, like snappers, and clownfish.
Amid that loss, animals are proving highly resilient. They're trying hard to hold on. Yet if warming continues, even the best adaptations may not be enough.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Time machine: How carbon dating brings the past back to life
Time machine: How carbon dating brings the past back to life

Yahoo

time32 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Time machine: How carbon dating brings the past back to life

From unmasking art forgery to uncovering the secrets of the Notre-Dame cathedral, an imposing machine outside Paris can turn back the clock to reveal the truth. It uses a technique called carbon dating, which has "revolutionised archaeology", winning its discoverer a Nobel Prize in 1960, French scientist Lucile Beck said. She spoke to AFP in front of the huge particle accelerator, which takes up an entire room in the carbon dating lab of France's Atomic Energy Commission in Saclay, outside the capital. Beck described the "surprise and disbelief" among prehistorians in the 1990s when the machine revealed that cave art in the Chauvet Cave in France's southeast was 36,000 years old. The laboratory uses carbon dating, also called carbon-14, to figure out the timeline of more than 3,000 samples a year. - So how does it work? - First, each sample is examined for any trace of contamination. "Typically, they are fibres from a jumper" of the archaeologist who first handled the object, Beck said. The sample is then cleaned in an acid bath and heated to 800 degrees Celsius (1,472 Fahrenheit) to recover its carbon dioxide. This gas is then reduced to graphite and inserted into tiny capsules. Next, these capsules are put into the particle accelerator, which separates their carbon isotopes. Isotopes are variants of the same chemical element which have different numbers of neutrons. Some isotopes are stable, such as carbon-12. Others -- such as carbon-14 -- are radioactive and decay over time. Carbon-14 is constantly being created in Earth's upper atmosphere as cosmic rays and solar radiation bombard the chemical nitrogen. In the atmosphere, this creates carbon dioxide, which is absorbed by plants during photosynthesis. Then animals such as ourselves get in on the act by eating those plants. So all living organisms contain carbon-14, and when they die, it starts decaying. Only half of it remains after 5,730 years. After 50,000 years, nothing is left -- making this the limit on how far back carbon dating can probe. By comparing the number of carbon-12 and carbon-14 particles separated by the particle accelerator, scientists can get an estimate of how old something is. Cosmic radiation is not constant, nor is the intensity of the magnetic field around Earth protecting us from it, Beck said. That means scientists have to make estimations based on calculations using samples whose ages are definitively known. This all makes it possible to spot a forged painting, for example, by demonstrating that the linen used in the canvas was harvested well after when the purported painter died. The technique can also establish the changes in our planet's climate over the millennia by analysing the skeletons of plankton found at the bottom of the ocean. - Notre-Dame revealed - Carbon dating can be used on bones, wood and more, but the French lab has developed new methods allowing them to date materials that do not directly derive from living organisms. For example, they can date the carbon that was trapped in iron from when its ore was first heated by charcoal. After Paris's famous Notre-Dame cathedral almost burned to the ground in 2019, this method revealed that its big iron staples dated back to when it was first built -- and not to a later restoration, as had been thought. The technique can also analyse the pigment lead white, which has been painted on buildings and used in artworks across the world since the fourth century BC. To make this pigment, "lead was corroded with vinegar and horse poo, which produces carbon dioxide through fermentation," Beck explained. She said she always tells archaeologists: "don't clean traces of corrosion, they also tell about the past!" Another trick made it possible to date the tombs of a medieval abbey in which only small lead bottles had been found. As the bodies in the tombs decomposed, they released carbon dioxide, corroding the bottles and giving scientists the clue they needed. "This corrosion was ultimately the only remaining evidence of the spirit of the monks," Beck mused. ber/dl/jhb

Scientists Uncover DNA Puzzle: 6,000-Year-Old Remains Reveal Mysterious Ancestors
Scientists Uncover DNA Puzzle: 6,000-Year-Old Remains Reveal Mysterious Ancestors

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Scientists Uncover DNA Puzzle: 6,000-Year-Old Remains Reveal Mysterious Ancestors

Archaeologists working in Colombia's Bogotá Altiplano recently uncovered ancient human remains that have left scientists puzzled. Genetic analysis of the 6,000-year-old skeletons revealed DNA with no direct connection to any known ancient or modern populations in South America, a finding that upends previous assumptions about regional ancestry. The team, whose study was published in Science Advances, analyzed both mitochondrial and genome-wide data from 21 ancient individuals who lived in the region between 6,000 and 500 years ago. The results show a striking lack of continuity with known Indigenous populations in Colombia. Instead, the genetic evidence suggests a closer, though still tenuous, link to Chibchan-speaking groups from the Isthmus of Panama. However, this connection remains incomplete and raises more questions than answers. Around 6,000 years ago, these hunter-gatherers transitioned to agriculture and settled in the Bogotá Altiplano. Then, they mysteriously vanished from the genetic record. Unlike the Anzick-1 child of the Clovis culture or ancient Channel Islands residents whose DNA traces through modern populations, these ancient Colombians stand alone, without clear descendants. Why these people's DNA doesn't align with others is still uncertain. One theory suggests that as these groups migrated and mingled with others, their genetic markers diluted over time. Another possibility is that they represent a unique, now-extinct lineage. 'This area has long been a crossroads of culture and language, where ancient people from Central and South America converged,' the researchers noted. 'Understanding their history may illuminate broader patterns of human migration across the continent.' Further research in neighboring areas, like western Colombia, Venezuela, and Ecuador, is planned to fill the gaps. For now, these ancient Colombians remain a genetic mystery, hinting at forgotten migrations and lost connections that shaped the Uncover DNA Puzzle: 6,000-Year-Old Remains Reveal Mysterious Ancestors first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 3, 2025

The World Isn't Ready for the Mental Health Toll of Extreme Heat
The World Isn't Ready for the Mental Health Toll of Extreme Heat

Scientific American

time10 hours ago

  • Scientific American

The World Isn't Ready for the Mental Health Toll of Extreme Heat

The coming summer is forecast to be a scorcher across the U.S. And climate scientists predict that at least one of the next five years will beat 2024 as the hottest year ever recorded globally. As heat waves are getting more intense and prolonged, their effect on the mind and body are also becoming more dire. Children and older people, as well as those who work outdoors, are most at risk. So are those with mental health disorders. Heat waves are the single highest cause of weather-related deaths in the U.S., where an estimated 1,300 fatalities from heat stroke and other temperature-related complications occur every year. Even those who survive a period of extreme heat may suffer serious neurological or other mental-health-related disorders. A new study published in Current Environmental Health Reports finds that the world is startlingly unprepared to deal with the mental health consequences of climate change. Of 83 action plans for heat-related health problems that were reviewed for the study, fewer than a third acknowledged the mental health effects of extreme or prolonged high temperatures. And only a fifth of these plans outlined specific actions to deal with contingencies such as increased hospitalizations for mental health disorders. On supporting science journalism If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today. How does extreme heat affect the brain? The human body operates optimally at 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit (37 degrees Celsius). If a person doesn't drink enough water when the weather is hot and dry, the body becomes dehydrated, the blood thickens, and the heart may not be able to pump enough oxygen to the brain. Additionally, the human brain burns up 20 percent of the body's energy and therefore needs to dissipate heat efficiently. In hot and humid conditions, sweating cannot cool the body and brain enough. This can lead to heat exhaustion, which has symptoms such as weakness, dizziness and headaches and, in extreme cases, heat stroke—which can then trigger delirium and loss of consciousness. A significant fraction of heat stroke survivors suffer neurological complications. Exposure to extreme heat can also increase the risk of suicide and can worsen schizophrenia, epilepsy, anxiety, depression, substance use disorder, neurodegenerative disorders (such as Alzheimer's disease) and negative emotions such as fear and anger. It may worsen sleep, which, in turn, can increase fatigue and accelerate neurodegeneration. Alcohol and recreational drugs, as well as certain medications used to treat mental illness, such as antidepressants, tranquilizers and antipsychotics, also appear to increase mental health vulnerability to heat. Studies find an increased risk of suicide and epileptic seizures during heat waves, as well as an increase in hospitalizations and emergency-room visits for mental health disorders. Heat can also disorient thinking, making people slow to realize that they need to seek shelter or help. Who is most at risk? The most vulnerable are those with existing mental health disorders. Disturbingly, prolonged heat waves also appear to worsen the risk among young children—and even the unborn—of developing mental health ailments in the future. Older people may also be particularly affected, such as by accelerated dementia and Alzheimer's. At particular risk are vast populations around the world who live without air-conditioning, including poor or homeless people and those who work outdoors, such as on farms. What can be done? The authors of the new Current Environmental Health Reports study point to interventions at several levels to help communities and individuals most at risk of climate mental health impacts. These can include public awareness campaigns, such as warning people about the mental health risk of consuming alcohol or other drugs during heat waves. Other interventions include establishing community cooling shelters for heat emergencies and increasing monitoring of mental health patients during heat waves. Extreme heat is here to stay, at least for the foreseeable future. We need to prepare people and communities to reduce the risk of mental health emergencies.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store