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Review and Animal Behavior

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Title: Review and Animal Behavior


1
Review and Animal Behavior
2
Animal behavior
  • Examples?
  • Definition
  • Why study behavior?

3
How to study animal behavior
  • Ethology The study of animal behavior in its
    natural environment
  • Mid 20th century
  • Tinbergen, von Frisch, Lorenz
  • 4 foundational questions
  • Mechanistic basis of the behavior
  • How does development influence behavior
  • Evolutionary history of the behavior
  • How does the behavior contribute to its fitness?
  • Behavioral ecology Stems from ethology, and
    attempts to explain how animal behaviors are
    controlled and why they developed

4
Proximate versus ultimate explanations
  • Proximate the mechanism (how)
  • Ultimate Evolutionary significance (why)
  • With your partner, write down a proximate and
    ultimate explanation

5
Fixed action pattern (FAP)
  • Sequence of unlearned behaviors
  • Nearly unchangeable
  • Carried out to completion
  • Sign stimulus (releaser) ? behavior
  • Example of an innate behavior

6
Imprinting
  • Generally irreversible
  • Sensitive period
  • Imprinting stimulus
  • Innate and learning components
  • Lorenz
  • Proximate, ultimate explanations?

7
Nature versus nurture
  • Can behavioral traits be treated like physical
    traits?
  • How do your determine whether genes, environment,
    or both cause behavior?
  • Example behaviors intelligence, musical/artistic
    talent, love?

8
Directed movements
  • Strong genetic influence
  • Kinesis versus taxis
  • Migration
  • Migrating blackcaps kept in captivity exhibited
    behaviors of migratory restlessness at night
  • Migratory and nonmigratory blackcaps mated and
    subjected to both environments
  • 40 of offspring exhibited migratory
    restlessness

9
Signals and communication
  • Signal causes change in another organisms
    behavior
  • Difference between communication and language
  • Pheromones (reproductive and nonreproductive
    behaviors)

10
Auditory communication
  • Songs of birds are partly learned
  • Critical period
  • Some insects, such as male Drosophila, produce a
    song even when reared in isolation
  • Very little variation, why?

11
Learning
  • Definition?
  • How do we learn?
  • Habituation Loss of responsiveness

12
Spatial learning and cognitive maps
  • Spatial learning (Tinbergen) experience consists
    of spatial structures of the environment
  • Use of landmarks. Reliable?
  • Cognitive maps Internal representation of
    spatial relationships

13
Classical conditioning (Pavlov)
14
Operant conditioning (Skinner)
15
How natural selections leads to behavioral traits
  • Variation exists fraction of the species T.
    elegans (garter snakes) had ability to recognize
    slugs by chemoreception
  • Increased fitness That variation has higher
    chance to survive and reproduce (genes passed on)
  • Led to changes in the population over time

16
  • Your friend Jim comes to you with a problem His
    dog barks too much. He tells you that it is
    getting worse and the only way he can get his dog
    to stop barking is to give it a treat. Explain
    to your friend what kind of learning the dog is
    exhibiting and what can be done about it.
  • Most birds cannot fly when they are first born,
    but only at a certain age. A scientists decides
    to isolate 2 groups of birds after being born.
    One group can practice flapping their wings at
    any point. The others groups wings are tied so
    that they cannot practice flapping. At the
    expected age, both groups are allowed to attempt
    to fly, and both groups do successfully with no
    apparent difference. What would account for these
    results. Innate, learned behavior? Both? Neither?
  • The magnolia warbler only breeds in spring/early
    summer. Propose a proximate and ultimate
    explanation for this situation.

17
Lab 11 Animal Behavior
18
Lab 11 Animal Behavior
  • Concepts
  • innate vs. learned behavior
  • experimental design
  • control vs. experimental
  • hypothesis
  • choice chamber
  • temperature
  • humidity
  • light intensity
  • salinity
  • other factors

19
Lab 11 Animal Behavior
  • Hypothesis
  • Tentative, testable explanation
  • It is the hypothesis in an experiment that is
    tested
  • Deduction
  • If hypothesis AND experiment THEN prediction

20
Lab 11 Animal Behavior
  • Hypothesis development
  • Poor I think pillbugs will move toward the wet
    side of a choice chamber.
  • Better IF pillbugs prefer a moist environment,
    AND they are randomly placed on both sides of a
    wet/dry choice chamber and allowed to move about
    freely for 10 minutes, THEN most will be found
    on the wet side.

21
Lab 11 Animal Behavior
  • Experimental design

sample size
22
Foraging behavior
  • Optimal foraging theory behaviors exist as a
    compromise between benefits of nutrition and cost
    of obtaining food
  • Predation must be a factor

23
Mating behavior
Promiscuous
Strong bonds
Monogamous (sex morphology similar)
Polygamous
Polyandry (dimorphic Larger, Showy males)
Polygyny (dimorphic Larger, Showy females)
  • Factors influencing evolution of mating systems
  • Need of young
  • Paternity certainty
  • certainty increases with external fertilization

24
Sexual selection
  • Sexual selection (selective pressure) ? evolution
    of male behavior and anatomy
  • Stalked-eyed flies
  • Females more likely to mate with males with
    longer eyestalks
  • Why? Correlation between genetic disorders and
    inability to develop long eyestalks

25
Agonistic behavior
  • Ritualized
  • Winner gains access to resources
  • Physical and behavioral characteristics involved
  • Usually harm is not done

26
Game theory and behavior
  • Game theory evaluates alternative strategies
    where outcome depends on strategies of other
    individuals
  • Why dont less fit mating strategies disappear?
  • Depends on abundance of certain strategies

27
Prisoners dilemma (why cooperative succeeds)
28
Altruism
  • Cost/benefit of selfish vs. unselfish behavior?
  • Altruism reduces individual fitness but increases
    fitness of others

29
Inclusive fitness
  • Helping close relatives would increase the
    inclusive fitness (own offspring and survival,
    reproduction of close relatives)
  • Hamiltons rule
  • Natural selection would favor altruistic behavior
    when rB gt C

30
Social learning
  • Experience involves observing others
  • Culture information transfer through social
    learning
  • Vervet monkey alarm calls
  • Memes (Richard Dawkins)

31
Sociobiology (E.O. Wilson)
  • Connects human culture to evolutionary theory
  • Social behaviors exist because they are
    perpetuated by natural selection
  • Does not mean all social behaviors are hardwired
    (nature vs. nurture)
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