Exact(5)
In his response to Dr. Key's essay called Fish pain: An inconvenient truth, Culum Brown, a fish expert at Macquarie University in Australia notes that only three of more than 30 people who responded to Dr. Keys' essay agree with him.
Take fish pain.
In the meantime, if you care about this issue and want to know more, Tim Carman just covered fish pain in depth for the Washington Post, and Lewis Bollard's piece about humane treatment of fish is another great place to start.
The discussion about fish pain in a free online discussion is priceless.
An objective reading of the essays by people who essentially comprise a who's who of people who study fish and other animals is that there is compelling evidence that fish do in fact feel pain and we need to ask why fish pain has evolved, not if it has evolved.
Similar(55)
Many scientists doubt that any invertebrate (or fish) feels pain because they lack the areas in the brain associated with human pain.
Lynne Sneddon and other scientists at the Roslin Institute have given new life to the case against fishing, providing strong evidence that fish feel pain and that being hooked in the lips is painful to them.
Scientists say fish feel pain.
"If these anglers condemn me for that, they are acknowledging that fish feel pain".
An entire industry may have to change its practices if the world accepts the idea that fish suffer pain.
Other nations, including Great Britain, have recognized that fish feel pain and stress, and that aquaculture facilities should be designed and managed to prevent such suffering.
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