First off, I have been stuck at home every weekend because of the ice or the flood. So will head off soon for my first trip. May as well kick off my season with a silly question and you can make fun of it or add your hilarious guess for the answer. That is something often intrigue me as to how they do it.
My question is why fish can always find their own mate and not cross with any other fish out there? I mean, the way their eyes are placed and the fact they cannot turn their head or bend to see the rest of their body (and they have no mirror
), there is no way they know how they look. What do you think is the secret of them always able to mate with their own kind? Like in nature a coho won't breed with a chum or pink, and a Fraser spring won't cross with a sockeye even though they run at the same time. Not to say a salmon will cross with a trout or dolly. So imagine you cannot see yourself how you look like, will you somehow find a gorilla as your mate?
Any intelligent or hilarious guess?