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????(?)???(Physiological analysis) -????? (Ethology)

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Title: ????(?)???(Physiological analysis) -????? (Ethology)


1
????(?)???(Physiological analysis)-?????
(Ethology)
??? ??????????? (??)
2010 ? ??
  • ???(Ayo)
  • ?? ???? ???????
  • ????????? ??

Ayo NUTN Web http//myweb.nutn.edu.tw/hycheng/
2
Part 1. ????????? (????)
  • ???? (History of the Study of Animal Behavior ).
  • ???? (Genetic Analysis of Behavior ).
  • ?? (Natural Selection and Behavior ).
  • ????? (Learning and Cognition.)
  • ???? (Physiological Analysis)
  • (?) ???? (Nerve Cells and Behavior ).
  • (?) ????? (The Endocrine System).
  • ??(The Development of Behavior ).

3
6b ????(?) ???
  • The endocrine system
  • How hormones influence behavior
  • Methods
  • Organizational and activation effects of hormones
  • The dynamic relationship between hormones and
    behavior
  • Interaction between hormones, behavior, and the
    environment
  • A detailed look

4
The endocrine system
  • Male plainfin midshipman fish display two
    reproductive strategies
  • Type I males build nests and hum to court
    females
  • Type II males sneaky cuckolders that dont build
    nests or hum
  • Type II males sneak into the type Is nest and
    spawn or lie outside the entrance and deposit
    sperm there while fanning water toward the nests
    opening
  • They must avoid detection by territorial males
  • The sperm of the type II male competes with that
    of the type I male, who did all the work

5
  • The midshipman fishes are the genus Porichthys of
    toadfishes(??) .
  • Typical midshipman fishes, such as the Plainfin
    Midshipman, are nocturnal and bury themselves in
    sand or mud of the intertidal zone during the
    day. At night they float just above the seabed.
  • Some species are armed with venomous dorsal
    spines and are capable of inflicting serious
    injuries if handled.

6
More differences between type I and II males
  • A type I male is larger and takes longer to
    sexually mature
  • Sonic muscles produce the droning hum (??????)
    attractive to females
  • The specialized brain allows him to hum his
    courtship song
  • He has large motor neurons to the sonic muscles
    and the brain center controlling those muscles
  • Type II males become sexually mature sooner, but
    cant attract mates
  • Sonic muscles are not well developed
  • The ratio of testes to body weight is much higher
    than type Is

7
A Type II male resembles a gravid female
  • Because of his bulging(???) gonads
  • His coloration is also similar to that of a
    female
  • It is easier for him to lurk around the nests of
    type I males

8
Sneaky cuckoldrya fixed behavioral strategy
  • Type II males will not hold territories or court
    females even when both options are offered
  • Their morphology prevents behavioral plasticity -
    the ability to switch to an alternative behavior
  • Type I males cuckold other type I males if given
    the chance
  • They take advantage of their large size and
    aggressively resist ejection by resident type I
    males
  • They exhibit aggressive cuckoldry when not
    humming (????) and defending a nest

9
??20HE protects female crabs
  • A soft-shelled female is extremely vulnerable to
    predation
  • By fish, octopus, other crustaceans - including
    other crabs
  • The female releases 20HE (20-hydroxyecdysone) to
    deter (??) her mate from eating her
  • It is not acting as a hormone (i.e. regulating
    molting)
  • But as a pheromone a chemical substance that
    functions in communication between individuals of
    the same species
  • 20HE may deter feeding in other species of
    predatory crustaceans

10
Thus, a chemical signal may function
  • Within an individual
  • i.e. as a molting hormone in arthropods
  • Between individuals of the same species
  • i.e. as a sex-specific feeding deterrent during
    mating, and
  • Between individuals of different species
  • i.e. as a feeding deterrent

11
Mechanism of action of peptide hormones
  • Activates enzymes
  • For long-term changes in protein function
  • Examples luteinizing hormone (LH) and
    follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH)

12
Mechanism of action of steroid hormones
  • Once inside a cell, steroids combine with
    receptor molecules
  • If binding occurs in the cytoplasm
  • This complex moves to the nucleus
  • And attaches to DNA
  • Affecting gene expression and protein synthesis
  • Takes hours or days and produces long-lasting
    effects on behavior

13
How hormones influence behavior
  • Hormones modify behavior by affecting
  • Sensory or perceptual mechanisms
  • Development or activity of the central nervous
    system, and
  • Muscles important in the execution of behavior

14
Effects on sensation and perception
  • Hormones influence the ability to detect certain
    stimuli
  • And the responses to and preferences for
    particular stimuli
  • In some species, mate choice is based on
    hormone-mediated differences in the ability to
    detect stimuli
  • Female domestic pigs are attracted to the
    boar(??) pheromone, 16-androsterone, while males
    are not
  • Castrated males given the female hormone
    estradiol show female responses to a boar
  • Hormones can mediate behavioral responses to
    stimuli
  • Vasotocin a peptide hormone in non-mammalian
    vertebrates similar to the mammalian hormone
    vasopressin (????? )

15
Vastocin influences mate choice in males
  • Vasotocin enhances male responsiveness to female
    stimuli
  • Male newts first rely on visual cues (i.e. size,
    shape, and color)
  • Then switch to olfactory cues for close-up
    confirmation of species, gender, and reproductive
    state
  • The male clasps the gravid female for hours in
    amplexus
  • The female becomes sexually receptive

16
  • A newt is an amphibian of the Salamandridae
    family, although not all aquatic salamanders are
    considered newts.
  • Newts are classified in the subfamily
    Pleurodelinae of the family Salamandridae, and
    are found in North America, Europe and Asia.

17
Hormones can cause a change in preference in
animals
  • Sex steroids can change social preferences
  • Given a choice of social partner, young animals
    that received parental care prefer family members
  • As they mature, they prefer non-family members
  • Hormone-mediated changes in social preference are
    not limited to maturing animals
  • In winter, adult female meadow voles prefer other
    females
  • During mating season (spring and summer), they
    prefer males
  • This reversal in preference is caused by higher
    estrogen levels, associated with longer days

18
Effects on development and activity of the
central nervous system
  • Circulating hormones affect behavior by
    influencing the central nervous system
  • They influence different regions of the brain,
    including the
  • (1) volume of brain tissue
  • (2) number of cells in brain tissue
  • (3) size of cell bodies
  • (4) extent of dendritic branching
  • (5) percentage of neurons sensitive to particular
    hormones
  • (6) survival of neurons

19
Hormones influence development of singing
behavior in birds
  • In the zebra finch, sex differences in the brain
    nuclei that control song are established around
    the time of hatching
  • Soon after hatching, the brains hormonal
    environment establishes sex differences in adult
    singing behavior (males sing and females do not)
  • The steroid hormones involved in the early
    masculinization of the zebra finch brain are
    neurosteroids, not gonadal steroids

20
Hormones affect muscles and motor neurons
  • South African clawed male frogs emit six
    different calls
  • The advertisement call allows females to find
    males
  • Sexually receptive females produce a rapping call
  • Unreceptive females tick
  • Hormone-induced changes in the muscles of the
    larynx results in sex differences in calling
    behavior

21
  • Differences in the calling behavior of male and
    female clawed frogs result from the effects of
    hormones on the muscles of the larynx.
  • (a) the males call consists of slow and fast
    trills
  • (b) unreceptive female emit the ticking call.

22
Hormones influence sex differences in muscles
  • Most mammals have sexually dimorphic muscles and
    motor neurons
  • Sex differences in the copulatory movements of
    adult rats result from early hormonal influences
  • Specialized muscles control copulatory reflexes
    in male rats
  • These muscles are present in both sexes at birth
  • But are completely absent in adult females, due
    to a lack of androgen at birth

23
An exception to the pattern
  • Naked mole-rats (???) cooperatively breeding
    rodents living in colonies
  • The queen is the only breeding female
  • Subordinates and males show few sex differences
  • The queens enlarged levator(??) ani muscle helps
    her deliver enormous numbers of offspring

24
  • Muscles of the perineum are sexually dimorphic in
    most mammals, being larger in males than in
    females as a result of the early effects of
    androgens. The levator ani muscle of the queen
    is larger than that of breeding males.

25
Studying hormonebehavior relationships
interventional studies
  • The experimenter manipulates the hormones of the
    animal
  • Removes the endocrine gland
  • Followed by hormone replacement therapy
  • For example, testosterone regulates courtship and
    copulation in the male green anole
  • What happens when the testes are removed?

26
  • Displays of the male green anole.

27
Removal of testes changes behavior
  • Removal led to a sharp decline in sexual behavior
    in green anoles
  • Administration of testosterone reinstated this
    behavior
  • Unlike sexual behavior, aggressive behavior only
    partially depends on gonadal hormones
  • Its also influenced by social factors such as
    residence status

28
  • Effect of castration and testosterone replacement
    therapy on the courtship behavior of the male
    green anole.

29
Interventional studies have become sophisticated
  • Cannulation techniques(????) administer tiny
    amounts of hormone to specific regions
  • Antihormones drugs that temporarily and
    reversibly suppress the actions of specific
    hormones
  • The antihormone RU486 blocks progesterone (????)
    receptors
  • Genetic knockout mice have a specific gene
    inactivated to eliminate the gene product (i.e. a
    hormone or hormone receptor)
  • Progesterone receptor knockout (PRKO) mice do not
    respond to progesterone because they lack the
    appropriate receptors

30
Male mice respond to hormones
Male laboratory mice are aggressive toward
infants and kill them
  • Males with progesterone implants attack pups
  • Males given RU486 dont attack pups
  • PRKO male mice do not respond to progesterone
  • Are not aggressive to infants

31
Studying hormonebehavior relationships
correlational studies
  • Researchers look for changes in behavior that
    parallel fluctuations in hormone levels
  • Not as conclusive as experimental work because
    there is no evidence of causation
  • One correlational study examined the relationship
    between testosterone levels and aggressive
    behavior in male song sparrows

32
Correlation between behavior and hormones
  • A close correlation exists between male song
    sparrow territorial and aggressive behavior and
    maximum levels of testosterone
  • Testosterone increases aggressive behavior in
    song sparrows - but the reverse is also true

33
Steroid hormones influence behavior through
organizational effects
  • In organizational effects, steroids organize
    neural pathways responsible for certain patterns
    of behavior
  • Occur early in life - just before or after birth
  • Are permanent the brain or cells change
    structurally
  • i.e. in the responsiveness of neurons to steroid
    hormones
  • organizational effects on nonneural systems
  • i.e. changes to the male western mosquitofish fin
    and its skeletal supports cause sex differences
    in mating behavior

34
Activational effects
  • Activational effects occur in adulthood and tend
    to be transient
  • Lasting only as long as the hormone is present at
    high levels
  • Involve subtle changes in previously established
    connections
  • i.e. slight changes in neurotransmitter
    production or release along established pathways
  • Not involved in gross reorganization of neural
    pathways

35
Organizational activational effects of steroid
hormones in Norway rats
  • Adult male and female rats differ in their sexual
    behavior
  • Male behaviors social investigation, mounting,
    intromission, and ejaculation
  • Female behaviors associated with
    solicitation(??) and acceptance(??)
  • Differences in adult copulatory behavior are due
    to differences in the brains of male and female
    rats
  • Differences are induced by irreversible actions
    of androgens in late fetal and early neonatal life

36
The organizational effects of gonadal steroids on
sexual behavior
  • Development of a male brain requires
    testosterone around the time of birth
  • In the absence of testosterone, a female brain
    develops
  • The effects of perinatal testosterone on adult
    sexual behavior are organizational
  • Occur early in life and involve permanent
    structural changes in the brain

37
  • Pattern of sexual differentiation in the brain
    and behavior of the Norway rat.

38
Steroid hormones have activational effects on
sexual behavior in rats
  • Female rats with high estrogen and progesterone
    levels display feminine sexual behaviors when
    near a sexually active male
  • Removal of the testes in an adult male eliminates
    copulatory behavior
  • Steroid hormone effects on sexual behavior are
    activational
  • Estrogen, progesterone and testosterone exert
    their effects by activating existing neural
    pathways.

39
Adults vs. juvenile responses to sex steroids
  • Activational hormones sex steroids in adults
    have only a transient activational effect on
    copulatory behavior
  • By adulthood, the nervous systems of adult males
    and females have already differentiated
  • The organizational effects of early steroid
    secretion have long since occurred
  • Mature brains are not capable of responding to
    hormonal signals of the opposite sex

40
Individual differences in the behavior of male
tree lizards
  • Individual differences are most pronounced in
    species with naturally occurring alternative male
    phenotypes
  • Such as tree lizards
  • The tree lizard has alternative male phenotypes
    that differ in aggressive behavior and color of
    the dewlap
  • Aggressive males have orange-blue dewlaps
  • Nonaggressive males have orange dewlaps

41
  • The Tree lizard or Ornate Tree Lizard (Urosaurus
    ornatus) is a species of lizard that is native to
    the southwestern United States and northern
    Mexico.
  • The species has been used to research the
    physiological changes in the body during the
    fight-or-flight response as related to stress and
    aggressive competition. Also, its life history
    and costs of reproduction have been documented in
    field populations in New Mexico.

42
Nonaggressive males (relative plasticity
hypothesis)
  • The differences are organized by steroid hormones
    during the neonatal period.
  • The two types of males have similar hormone
    profiles in adulthood.
  • Nonaggressive males are flexible in their
    territorial behavior, switching between sedentary
    (??) and nomadic(??) behavior in response to
    environmental conditions. (developmentally
    plastic)
  • When conditions become stressful, the hormone
    corticosterone rises and ultimately reduces site
    fidelity(???), triggering nomadic behavior in
    nonaggressive males.

43
Developmentally fixed developmentally plastic
phenotypes
  • When phenotypes are developmentally fixed, they
    cant change
  • Caused by organizational effects of steroid
    hormones in neonates
  • Developmentally plastic phenotypes can change
  • Behaviors change in response to environmental
    conditions
  • Changes in adult hormone levels reflect
    activational effects

44
A reciprocal relationship between hormones and
behavior
  • Hormones can activate specific forms of behavior
  • And behavioral stimuli can induce rapid changes
    in hormone levels
  • Sexual stimuli can trigger a rapid increases in
    androgen levels
  • In the marine toad, androgen levels increase with
    time spent in amplexus
  • Suggesting that mating behavior induced the
    hormonal response rather than vice versa

45
  • Changes in plasma androgen in male marine toads
    as a function of the time spent in amplexus.

46
  • Amplexus (Latin "embrace") is a form of
    pseudocopulation in which a male amphibian grasps
    a female with his front legs as part of the
    mating process. At the same time or with some
    time delay, he fertilizes the female eggs with
    fluid containing sperm.

47
Hormonal suppression of behavior
  • Androgens and vasotocin mediate amplexus in newts
  • Males clasp a female while she becomes sexually
    receptive
  • What happens if a male in amplexus detects a
    predator?
  • Does he continue with amplexus and hope for the
    best?
  • Or terminate the behavior and seek a safe hiding
    place?
  • The hormone corticosterone suppresses amplectic
    behavior
  • Reducing the activity of neurons active during
    amplexus
  • It acts via a receptor in the membrane of
    neurons, not by altering gene expression and
    protein synthesis

48
Hormones rapidly change behavior
  • The dynamic interactions between hormones,
    behavior, and the nervous system allow the
    behavioral state of an animal to shift rapidly
    and adaptively to changing environmental
    circumstances.
  • Hormones allow an animal to adjust its behavior
    so that it is appropriate for the situation at
    hand
  • Hormones, behavior, and the environment interact
    to generate adaptive behavior in the long term

49
Adjusting to the environment
  • Habitats of species provide different mating
    opportunities
  • Associations between gonadal hormones and sexual
    behavior varies among species
  • To allow the greatest number of surviving
    offspring
  • A diversity of reproductive patterns exits in
  • (1) production of gametes
  • (2) secretion of sex steroids by the gonads, and
  • (3) timing of mating behavior
  • Three general patterns of reproduction exist in
    vertebrates associated, dissociated, and
    constant (but other patterns exist)

50
Associated reproductive pattern
  • Some animals (i.e. the Norway rat) exhibit a
    close temporal association between gonadal
    activity and mating
  • Gonadal growth and increased levels of sex
    steroids activate mating behavior
  • Found in most vertebrates studied

51
Dissociated reproductive pattern
  • Mating behavior is completely uncoupled from
    gamete maturation and secretion of sex steroids
  • Gonadal activity occurs after all breeding
    activity has ceased
  • Gametes are produced and stored for the next
    breeding season
  • Gonadal hormones may not play a role in the
    activation of sexual behavior

52
Species exhibiting an associated reproductive
pattern
  • Inhabit harsh environments with a predictable,
    but narrow, window of opportunity to breed
  • Specific physical or behavioral cue triggers
    mating behavior
  • Red-sided garter snakes range farther north than
    any other reptile in the Western Hemisphere
  • The mating opportunity lasts 1 to 4 weeks
  • Male courtship behavior is activated by increased
    ambient temperature following winter dormancy
  • Not by testicular hormones

53
  • The Garter snake is a Colubrid snake genus common
    across North America, ranging from Alaska and
    Canada to Central America. It is the single most
    widely distributed genus of reptile in North
    America.

54
Hormones do not control red-sided garter snake
courtship
  • Testicular activity is minimal in male snakes
    during the period between emerging from
    hibernation and mating
  • Five to ten weeks after males have left the den
    site and no longer court females
  • The testes grow and androgen levels increase
  • Sperm produced is stored for use the next spring
  • Males use environmental cues, not sex hormones,
    to determine mating season
  • In females, changes in sexual attractivity and
    receptivity are mediated by physiological changes
    that occur as a consequence of mating

55
Constant (opportunistic) reproductive pattern
  • Characteristic of species in harsh environments
    (i.e. deserts)
  • Suitable breeding conditions occur suddenly and
    unpredictably
  • In desert-dwelling animals, reproduction is
    initiated by rainfall
  • While waiting for breeding conditions
  • Species maintain large gonads, mature gametes,
    and high circulating levels of sex steroids

56
Zebra finches show a constant reproductive pattern
  • Zebra finches live in the deserts of Australia
  • Droughts last for years, so males and females
    maintain their reproductive systems in a constant
    state of readiness
  • Rainfall produces flushes of grass seeds - food
    for young
  • Courtship begins shortly after the rain starts to
    fall
  • Copulation occurs within hours
  • Nest building begins the next day
  • Breeding readiness also varies with habitat
    predictability
  • Birds in arid rangelands with unpredictable
    rainfall patterns keep high levels of
    reproductive readiness

57
Onlookers(???) in the social environment
  • Male Siamese fighting fish are spectacularly
    colorful
  • They build mucus-covered bubble nests at the
    water surface
  • Nests attract females and are home for eggs and
    hatched fry
  • Males defend territories centered on their nest
  • Social environment (presence/absence of an
    audience) and territory status (presence/absence
    of a nest) (onlookers)
  • Influence aggressive behavior and hormone levels
    in males

58
???? (Siamese fighting fish)
  • ?????????,??????,?????,??????????????,????????????
    ???
  • ?????,???????,????????

59
Evidence of hormone-mediated aggression
  • Aggressive behavior and levels of 11KT (an
    androgen in fish that mediates aggressive
    behavior) in male Siamese fighting fish were
    influenced by male territory status and audience
  • Males without a nest were less aggressive
  • And had lower 11KT levels, when a female audience
    or no audience was present
  • In the presence of another male, males were less
    aggressive
  • And had lower 11KT hormone levels, when both had
    nests

60
Male Siamese fighting fish behavior
  • Experimental setup for testing the response of
    male Siamese fighting fish to presence and type
    of audience.

61
Male Siamese fighting fish behavior
  • In males, 11KT levels are influenced by the
    presence of a nest and an audience

62
The hormonal basis of helping at the nest
  • Helpers nonbreeding animals that assist the
    breeding pair in rearing young
  • Providing food and protecting the young
  • The evolutionary causes of helping helpers get
    some of their genes into the population even
    though they dont breed
  • Florida scrub jays live in small groups in south
    central Florida scrub oaks
  • Helpers offspring of the breeding pair from a
    previous year who remain on the territory and
    help raise siblings

63
Florida Scrub-Jay
  • The Florida Scrub-Jay (Aphelocoma coerulescens)
    is one of the species of scrub-jay native to
    North America.
  • It is the only species of bird endemic to the
    U.S. state of Florida.

64
The physiological basis of helping behavior
  • Helpers are physiologically capable of
    reproduction
  • Their testes and ovaries produce hormones
  • They can gather enough food to breed successfully
  • Levels of the stress hormone corticosterone
    (suppresses production of reproductive hormones)
    equal breeders
  • Prolactin levels increase through the breeding
    season, initiating parental care
  • Females produce more prolactin than males
  • Cues from the nest, eggs, and nestlings stimulate
    production
  • Helpers have low prolactin levels because
    breeders wont allow them near the nest until the
    young have hatched

65
Prolactin levels are lower in helpers
  • There is a relationship between a helpers level
    of prolactin and the feeding score (a measure of
    how much a bird fed the nestlings)
  • Feeding score 0 helpers didnt help
  • Prolactin levels of the helpers that did help are
    much higher

66
Scent-marking
  • Scent-marking the act of strategically placing a
    chemical mark in the environment
  • Many mammals apply urine, feces, or secretions
    from special scent glands on the digits, legs,
    chest, belly, head, or in the anal canal
  • Many mammals have scent glands at multiple
    locations
  • Scent marks convey information about individual
    identification, age, and reproductive state
  • Establish and maintain territories and breeding
    relationship

67
Urine-marking by domestic dogs
  • Urinary behavior is sexually dimorphic
  • Adult males urinate more frequently than adult
    females
  • And are more likely to urine-mark
  • Urinary posture is sexually dimorphic males lift
    a leg to urinate, females squat
  • Sex differences in urinary posture are organized
    by sex steroids (testosterone) around the time of
    birth
  • But testosterone is not needed for the
    leg-lifting posture
  • A neutered male still lifts his leg to urinate

68
Urine marking in female dogs
  • Urine marking is more common than previously
    described for female dogs
  • The propensity to mark with urine varies across
    the estrous cycle
  • Most common just before and during estrus
  • Conveys information about her reproductive state

69
Hormones affect salmon migration
  • Adult Atlantic salmon leave the ocean and return
    to their natal stream to spawn in the fall
  • Laying thousands of large, fertilized eggs in a
    gravel depression called a redd
  • Parr very young salmon, 5 cm long, with vertical
    marks on their sides for camouflage
  • Smolt 15 cm long fish that undergoes
    smoltification, which prepares them for migration
    to the ocean
  • Dramatic changes in physiology, morphology, and
    behavior occur during changes from parr to smolt
  • To prepare for migration

70
Atlantic salmon
  • Salmon is the common name for several species of
    the family Salmonidae.
  • Several other fish in the family are called
    trout the difference is often said to be that
    salmon migrate and trout are resident, a
    distinction that holds true for the Salmo genus.
  • Salmon live along the coasts of both the North
    Atlantic (one migratory species Salmo salar) and
    Pacific Oceans (approximately a dozen species of
    the genus Oncorhynchus), as well as having been
    introduced into the Great Lakes of North America.

71
Young salmon change dramatically
  • Parr marks are replaced by silver in smolt to
    evade (??) predators
  • Young salmon change their position in the current
  • Parr face into the current (positive rheotaxis)
    to see food coming
  • Smolts face downstream (negative rheotaxis) for
    their impending migration to the sea
  • Social behavior also changes
  • Parr aggressively defend individual feeding
    territories
  • Smolts exhibit decreased territorial and
    agonistic behavior and eventually form schools

72
Environmental factors initiate and hormones
mediate changes
  • Environmental factors (i.e. high water flow and
    increasing photoperiod and temperature) prompt
    smoltification
  • Hormones mediate physiological and morphological
    changes
  • Prolactin decreases during smoltification
  • Growth hormone increases and increases tolerance
    for saltwater
  • Cortisol promotes acclimation to a particular
    environment
  • Thyroid hormones replace parr marks with silver
    coloration

73
Summary
  • Transfer of internal information by the endocrine
    system occurs slowly, with general, long-lasting
    effects
  • Communication occurs through hormones and
    neurohormones that produce changes at the
    cellular level
  • That ultimately influence behavior
  • Two types of hormones are peptide and steroid
    hormones
  • Hormones influence behavior by affecting
    sensation, the central nervous system, or muscles
    responsible for the execution of behavior
  • Effects of steroid hormones on behavior have been
    divided into organizational and activational
    effects

74
Summary
  • Hormonal effects on behavior can be studied by
    interventional studies or correlational studies
  • Hormones initiate changes in behavior
  • And behavior can causes changes in levels of
    hormones
  • Interactions between hormones and behavior are
    sensitive to the physical and social environment
  • Behaviors mediated by hormones include
  • Aggression, courtship, mating, caring for young,
    scent-marking, and migrating

75
?????
Japalura_at_hotmail.com
  • Ayo ?? NUTN ? http//myweb.nutn.edu.tw/hycheng/
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