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Animal Behavior

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Animal Behavior Chapter 45 Mader: Biology 8th Ed. Mader: Biology 8th Ed. Outline Genetic Basis Nature versus Nurture Learning Female Choice Male Competition Dominance ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Animal Behavior


1
Animal Behavior
  • Chapter 45

2
Outline
  • Genetic Basis
  • Nature versus Nurture
  • Learning
  • Female Choice
  • Male Competition
  • Dominance Hierarchy
  • Territoriality
  • Communicative Behavior
  • Sociobiology and Animal Behavior
  • Altruism versus Self-Interest

3
Genetic Basis
  • Two basic types of behavioral questions
  • Mechanistic
  • Survival Value
  • Both recognize behavior, observable and
    coordinated responses to environmental stimuli,
    has at least a partial genetic basis.
  • Genes influence development of neural and
    hormonal mechanisms controlling behavior.

4
Nature or Nurture
  • Nature (inherited) versus nurture (environmental)
    questions have been, and are still, constantly
    debated.
  • Studies on identical twins can be used to
    determine extent of inherited behavior.
  • Genetically identical twins raised separately are
    sometimes remarkably similar.

5
Behavior Undergoes Development
  • Some behaviors seem to be stereotyped.
  • Fixed Action Patterns (FAPs)
  • Originally assumed to be elicited by a sign
    stimulus.
  • Increasingly thought to develop after practice.

6
Pecking Behavior of Laughing Gull Chicks
7
The Phenomenon of Learning
  • Operant Conditioning
  • Gradual strengthening of stimulus-response
    corrections.
  • Trick-training in birds.
  • Imprinting
  • Imitate behavior observed during sensitive
    period.
  • Goslings follow any moving object after birth.

8
The Phenomenon of Learning
  • Song Learning in Birds
  • Brain of a bird seems to be especially primed to
    respond to acoustical stimuli during a sensitive
    period.
  • Social experience appears to have an even
    stronger influence over development of singing.

9
Behavior Is Adaptive
  • Sexual selection refers to changes in females and
    males, often due to differential reproductive
    success, caused by mate choice and competition
    for mates.

10
Female Choice
  • Courtship displays help males and females
    recognize each other for successful mating.
  • Good Genes Hypothesis
  • Females benefit from selective choice by securing
    sperm with good genes.
  • Run-Away Hypothesis
  • Females choose mates on the basis of traits that
    make them attractive to females.

11
Male Competition
  • Cost-benefit analyses have been conducted to
    determine if the benefit of access to mating is
    worth the cost of competition among males.
  • Positive effects (benefits) must outweigh
    negative effects (costs) if the behavior is to
    continue.

12
Dominance Hierarchy
  • Males and females have separate dominance
    hierarchies.
  • Higher-ranking individuals have greater access to
    resources.
  • Baboons form temporary consort pairs with
    females.
  • Males may monopolize estrous females.
  • Or may assist females or form friendship groups
    to secure future matings.

13
Female Choice and Baboon Male Dominance
14
Territoriality
  • Territoriality is protecting an area against
    other individuals.
  • Red Deer Stags (males) compete for groups of
    hinds (females).
  • Hinds only mate with one stag.
  • Harem Master must be large and powerful to fight
    off challengers.
  • Less body fat, thus may be more likely to starve
    in bad times, and have shorter life span.

15
Competition Between Red Deer Stags
16
Animal Societies
  • Members of a society are organized in a
    cooperative manner that extends beyond sexual and
    parental behavior.
  • Communicative Behavior
  • Chemical
  • Pheromones designate chemical signals that are
    passed between members of the same species.

17
Communicative Behavior
  • Auditory
  • Faster than chemical communication.
  • Can be modified by loudness, pattern, repetition,
    and duration.
  • Visual
  • Used by species active during the day.
  • Contests between males make use of threat
    postures.
  • Save energy by avoiding fighting.

18
Communicative Behavior
  • Tactile
  • Occurs when one animal touches another.
  • Gull chicks peck at the parents beak in order to
    induce the parent to feed them.
  • Foraging honeybees return to the hive and perform
    a waggle dance that indicates the distance and
    direction of a food source.

19
Communication Among Bees
20
Sociobiology and Animal Behavior
  • Sociobiology applies the principles of
    evolutionary biology to the study of behavior in
    animals.
  • Assume individuals derive more reproductive
    benefits than costs from living in a society.
  • Other advantages include predator avoidance,
    assistance in rearing offspring, and finding food.

21
Sociobiology and Animal Behavior
  • Societal Disadvantages
  • Crowding
  • Resource allocation.
  • Spread of disease.

22
Altruism versus Self-Interest
  • Altruism is behavior that involves a reduction in
    direct fitness that may be compensated by an
    increase in indirect fitness.
  • Inclusive Fitness includes both personal
    reproduction and reproduction of relatives.
  • Genetic relatedness may underlie many/most acts
    of apparent altruism.

23
Nest Helpers
  • Green Wood-hoopoes
  • One breeding pair per flock.
  • Other sexually mature members may help feed and
    protect fledglings and protect the home
    territory.
  • Helper is contributing to survival of its own
    kin.
  • Helper is more likely than nonhelper to inherit
    parental territory.

24
Migratory Behavior in Blackcap Warblers
25
Feeding Behavior of Garter Snakes
26
Review
  • Genetic Basis
  • Nature versus Nurture
  • Learning
  • Female Choice
  • Male Competition
  • Dominance Hierarchy
  • Territoriality
  • Communicative Behavior
  • Sociobiology and Animal Behavior
  • Altruism versus Self-Interest

27
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