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Fish yawn, cough, and even burp. But they don’t get choked
up.
Crying, says Monterey Bay Aquarium’s retired senior marine
biologist Steve Webster, is an emotional response made only by big-brained
mammals.
Crybabies are "self-aware and can reflect upon past
events, make projections about future events and engage in lots of other complex
cognitive behaviors," Webster said.
"Since fishes lack the parts of the brain that set us
apart from the fishes—the cerebral cortex—I doubt very much that fishes engage
in anything like crying," Webster told LiveScience.
"And certainly they produce no tears, since their eyes are constantly
bathed in a watery medium."
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