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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent treatment of cichlid behavior
The Cichlid fishes are one of the most diverse groups of animals in the world, this is partially an artifact of their distribution in rift lakes. This isolation in a diverse environment has led them to evolve to fill a myriad of ecological niches. They are also one of the most popular groups of aquarium fishes and their behavior and diversity is of interest to a large...
Published on December 7, 2003 by Currahee

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7 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too Complicated
I have been in this hobby for about 6 years and I still have not found this book helpful for any of my needs. It is too much complicated and not helpful for an aquaristic interest.Especially If you are a beginner, you will not find it helpful. The book is especially written for people who has scientific interest on Cichlid fishes; in detail with very few pictures.
Published on February 28, 2004 by Serdar Guler


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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent treatment of cichlid behavior, December 7, 2003
By 
Currahee (South Mississippi) - See all my reviews
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The Cichlid fishes are one of the most diverse groups of animals in the world, this is partially an artifact of their distribution in rift lakes. This isolation in a diverse environment has led them to evolve to fill a myriad of ecological niches. They are also one of the most popular groups of aquarium fishes and their behavior and diversity is of interest to a large number of people. That is why this book, a scientific treatment of their behavior can be produced for a larger audience. As such this is perhaps the best book, available to the lay reader, on fish behavior.

George Barlow is (was) a fish behaviorist at UC Berkeley. In this volume he explains the complex behaviors of mate selection, territoriality, feeding, and the rearing of offspring in this well studied group. He also discusses their diversity and, sadly, has to address their conservation (as the their home is being lost to several environmental factors). This book is interesting and well written. However, it is probably only of interest to the most serious cichlid hobbyist, or persons with a special interest in fish behavior in general.

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent addition the natural history collection!, February 8, 2003
By 
Kirby Adams (Lansing, MI United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Cichlid Fishes: Nature's Grand Experiment In Evolution (Hardcover)
The first thing that needs to be said about this book is that it is NOT a book about keeping cichlids in aquariums. I think that is a misconception some people may get since cichlids are such popular aquarium subjects. If you're looking for information on cichlids in the aquarium, you need to hunt down books by Paul Loiselle or Ad Konings. This is a book about evolutionary science.

The cichlids are really the animal darlings of the evolution field in the same sense that the Galapagos Islands are the geographical Mecca. This book focuses on cichlids from the African Great Lakes: Malawi., Victoria, and Tanganyika. The populations in these lakes have been isolated and thus present a wonderful living experiment in evolution and speciation. The New World members of Cichlidae aren't forgotten - there's plenty of examples from them too.

The text doesn't delve too deeply into scientific theory. It's still a relatively easy read for the layperson. Its aim is to explain why the cichlids fascinate biologists and evolutionists - without getting overly technical. It achieves that goal admirably.

The bibliography is worth the cover price. There are 23 pages of small-print references and a numerical guide to citations by chapter.

If you're an aquarist with an interest in the science behind the fish, a scientist with little experience with fish or evolution, or a "normal" person wondering what all the fuss is about, this is a good choice.

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Cichlid Fishes, December 30, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: The Cichlid Fishes: Nature's Grand Experiment In Evolution (Hardcover)
As a "liberal arts type", I seldom read books on science - but once started on this one, I could hardly bring myself to put it down. It is a joy from beginning to end. Barlow's knowledge of cichlids is vast and he shares it with us in a clear and readable way. You'll be fascinated as you learn about these little creatures who can change their sex overnight, who feed with an amazingly complex arrangement of jaws and teeth, and whose parenting skills should be the envy of us humans. The writing style is warm and personal and reveals the author's wonderful sense of humor and lifelong enthusiasm for his subject.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Well done: Real aquarist needs evolutionary aspects, December 17, 2002
This review is from: The Cichlid Fishes: Nature's Grand Experiment In Evolution (Hardcover)
Clear, understandable and enjoyable, Mr Barlow's book helped me gain much insight about the evolutionary aspects of cichlid behaviours. Some of the cited examples for behavioral patterns are really spectacular! Male C. nicaraguense cichlids protecting the young of a foreign species, C. dovi, a large predatory cichlid species in Lake Nicaragua... I have never heard of something like that among fish. And the reasoning behind this behavior in the evolutionary sense... Or catfish raising the babies of cichlids in Malawi lake... It is always a new surprise to me to see once again how inventive the evolution is.

This is the kind of book I like most; based on scientific facts but written in a reader friendly manner, fully understandable and enjoyable. Thanks to spectacular examples and their clear explanations, very interesting too...

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars look into an aquarium and see yourself (and your mate), August 4, 2001
By 
Philip Greenspun (Cambridge, MA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Cichlid Fishes: Nature's Grand Experiment In Evolution (Hardcover)
You've got to love a U.C. Berkeley professor who quotes from the AP wire to reinforce the difference between soft-rayed and spiny-rayed fish:

"... when I read the headline to an article in ... the San Francisco Chronicle (1 April 1997), I knew both it was not an April Fool's Day joke and that the fish was most likely a cichlid, and it was.

Man Chokes on Tropical Fish

Bayou Visa, La. Stephen Hill Epperson, 36, popped a friend's 6-inch tropical fish into his mouth as a joke Sunday

and died when it got stuck in his throat. The Jack Dempsey fish became wedged in Epperson's airway, said Dr. F.H. Metz, coroner for St. Mary Parish.

The Jack Dempsey is indeed a cichlid and performed the typical response of a spiny-rayed fish when engulfed by a predator: It locked its fine spines in the upright position to thwart being swallowed. Had the fish been a soft-rayed fish, such as the goldfish that have so often been safely gulped down by college students, the unfortunate Mr. Epperson would still be alive."

Cichlids are freshwater fish that provide parental care for their children. They are among the most intelligent of fish. Among the thousands of species of cichlids, it is possible to find behavior that is familiar to students of human psychology. There are cichlid fathers that stay with the wife and kids when times are tough but desert to find a new mate if predation levels are low enough that the female and his offspring by her can survive on their own (cf. American ghetto life after Aid to Families with Dependent Children).

If you decide to skim the book, make sure to read the last chapter carefully. It contains some important ideas about human impact on ecology.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cichlids and Natural Selection, December 5, 2001
By 
Patrick Weir (Edison, New Jersey United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Cichlid Fishes: Nature's Grand Experiment In Evolution (Hardcover)
This book is an excellent resource for anyone interested in cichlids, in animal behavior, or in natural selection. There is enough variety in the book to satisfy cichlid hobbyists. This is not a fish identification book, nor is it a manual for keeping cichlids in the aquarium. However, much useful information for keeping cichlids can be gleaned from this book. Dr. Barlow's presentation of reproductive isolation and his descriptions of various behaviors are enough to make this book worth reading. The writing is clear, but not oversimplified. If you like cichlids, get this book.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Book, March 27, 2006
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This was a good book on Cichlid fish. Not for the Aquarist, for the Biologist. Title is a little misleading, the book is more about behavior than evolution although there is one good chapter of evolution. Of course, the evolutionary implications of the behavioral patterns are there but they are not the main focus of the writing.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Gem of a Reference For Cichlid Keepers, September 22, 2008
By 
K. K. Doyle (Kodiak, Alaska USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Barlow's in-depth study of the Cichlids is a valuable reference for those who are taken with this species of freshwater fish. They are special fish (go ahead and laugh) as anyone whose ever kept them will attest. Their behavior and disposition make them family pets, though many keepers are inured with them because most are earthmovers and like to rip up plants and rearrange the tank.

George Barlow is a Biologist whose dedication to the species as an evolutionary model is well known in his field. His research and findings not only assist the keeper and icthyologist, but while the research and data analysis might bore many, he presents his findings with humor and surprise.

I've kept Cichlids for over 40 years, and never have I understood so clearly many of the things I have learned about Chichlids. The social structure, comprehensive parenting and even surrogate parenting that they exhibit, their breeding habits and other behaviors clearly represent a model for evolution, and Barlow enlightens and humors those of us who are interested by these things.

Not for the beginner aquarist, but certainly required reading for Chichlid keepers and researchers, zoologists and ichthyologist and even evolutionists. I recommend it whole-heartedly.
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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Grand Narrative, July 21, 2003
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The aquarium lights go out at a certain time every evening, and what's a fishkeeper to do but... read about fish?

Cichlidophiles can find many books on their favorite subject. These works, however, seem to go directly from beginner guides to dry, semi-scientific texts, perhaps poorly translated into English, with nothing in between. But publishing, like nature, abhors a vacuum.

Dr. George W. Barlow has woven together his own research with that of other scientists into a rich narrative of cichlid family history to fill this void. The Cichlid Fishes does read like a family history-flashy cousins, famous uncles, strange ancestors and the like-and science is their family diary.

No mistake, this is a serious exploration of Cichlidian evolutionary success. The important research Barlow and his peers have performed over the decades has answered many questions. Experiments and observation have shown that the Cichlids' spectacular rate of speciation arises from the physical characteristics of their jaws, thus increasing dietary options.

The strength of the research also lies in how many more questions it has raised. For example, the subject of parental care is understandably a dominant theme. The way the Discus feeds its young from secretions in its skin is documented, and the follow on question is, how did mammalian milk production evolve? The body of Cichlid data is a springboard for evolutionary studies everywhere.

Throughout this "serious" work, the reader finds that he or she is studying complex scientific theory painlessly. Barlow writes about his favorite subject with affection and humor, in a way that the hobbyist can enjoy as well as those who make a living in the field of biology. Definitions of scientific terms are seamlessly incorporated into the Cichlid story. After reading this book, you may find yourself spouting off words like "polygynandry" and "trophic" at your next hobbyist club meeting as if you were discussing the weather.

As in any family history, the story includes speculation on the future. What will happen to the fishes in this unsure world? Barlow gives statistics on the state of the Earth's waters and our affect on them, and presents his own opinions on their significance, based on the biology of Cichlids. Will Cichlids have a chance to continue evolving?

You, dear reader, are invited to explore Cichlid Fishes for yourself, in order to form your own opinion.

Surfing the web is something else you can do when the tank lights go out. For more information about The Cichlid Fishes, Dr. Barlow and his work, see his web page.

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7 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too Complicated, February 28, 2004
By 
Serdar Guler (Istanbul, Turkey) - See all my reviews
I have been in this hobby for about 6 years and I still have not found this book helpful for any of my needs. It is too much complicated and not helpful for an aquaristic interest.Especially If you are a beginner, you will not find it helpful. The book is especially written for people who has scientific interest on Cichlid fishes; in detail with very few pictures.
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The Cichlid Fishes: Nature's Grand Experiment In Evolution
The Cichlid Fishes: Nature's Grand Experiment In Evolution by George W. Barlow (Hardcover - October 25, 2000)
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