I don’t mean to start a fight, what we observe in our tanks is very interesting and informative for us. But it’s not “research” in the academic sense.
Again, I don’t mean to be confrontational, I respect that what we observe in our home aquaria is useful to pass on to others who seek to be successful in keeping similar species. But if this student needs research for a college assignment, our personal observations won’t cut it. I feel strongly about this as I research in a fish morphology and behavior lab at a university.
https://www.fishmorphandbehavior.org/
If any of my students were assigned a project to research the natural history and economic impacts of a species, I would have to remove marks if they came back to me with anecdotal observations from strangers on a online forum and not legitimate scientific studies.
That’s not to say what we do and observe isn’t valuable. It’s just not valuable to this individual. They need peer reviewed scientific publications.
Scientists study more than one specimen unless it’s a holotype and even then, they look at Many other specimens to confirm the finding that it Is a holotype. Some of my research spans Years and has hundreds of thousands of data points from direct observations of large wild populations. True scientific research goes through a review process, it’s statistically analyzed, the processes are approved by ethics committees and veterinarians. It’s not just one person with one fish making any given claim based on a few observations.
I do apologize if this has come across as snobbish or overly aggressive. I really don’t mean for it to be. I simply feel this student should seek out a more acceptable source of information for this project based on how they described it.