You may not hear them say "ouch," but fish feel pain
just the same, according to a new book, Do Fish Feel Pain? by
Victoria Braithwaite, a professor of fisheries and biology at
Penn State. She argues that fish, like most other organisms,
are capable of experiencing pain, and that humans can cause
fish to suffer. She found that fish have the same kind of specialized
nerve fibers that mammals and birds use to detect
noxious stimuli, tissue damage and pain. She also explored
whether fish are sentient beings, and whether an organism
must possess "awareness" to experience pain.
"We now know that fish are actually more cognitively
competent than we thought - - some species of fish have very
sophisticated forms of cognition," Braithwaite wrote in a
press release. "In our experiments, we showed that if we hurt
fish, they react, and then if we give them pain relief, they
change their behavior, strongly indicating that they feel pain."
She was drawn to the issue after reading about fish-farming
concerns. "By 2030, half of all fish that humans eat will
come from fish farms," Braithwaite told Discovery News. "It
seemed logcal to me to care about fish, because agriculture in general is confronting animal-welfare issues. If we are concerned
about animal welfare, we should be concerned about
animal welfare."
She believe the U.S. is 10 years behind Europe in its
thinking about the way it keeps and kills animals in agriculture.
Those concerns are now being extended to aquaculture.
"Electrical stunning may change the way we harvest fish
at sea. We have a responsibility, I think, to make clean and
quick kills of the fish we eat. Certainly, most of us are not
comfortable with piles of fish slowly suffocating on the decks
of fishing trawlers at sea and in port. People are rightly asking,
'Isn't there a better way?'"
To do this on a wide-scale commercial level, Braithwaite
recommends that protections related to pain and suffering
now given to birds and mammals should be widened to
include fish. "There is a perception that fish have simple
brains and are incapable of feelings, and this has somehow
made them different from birds and mammals when it
comes to our concerns for their welfare. But we now have
strong evidence that suggests fish are more intelligent than
previously thought, and their behavior more complex."