Title: What is behavior
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2What is behavior?
- 1st try
- Behavior is movement
Problem a) Leaves dance in the wind b) Bee
dance in the hive
3What is behavior?
- 2nd try
- Behavior is movement that has an internal
cause
Problem a) Plastic behaves in strange ways
when heated b) Rover behaves in strange ways
when tickled
4What is behavior?
- 3rd try
- Behavior is movement of a system of parts
that has an internal cause
Problem A chameleon change color in new
surrounding.
5What is behavior?
- 4th try
- Behavior is movement ,or change of external
condition, of a system of parts that has an
internal cause
Problem a) A disease changed the color of the
patients skin. b) A chameleon changes
color in the new surrounding.
6What is behavior?
- 5th try
- Behavior is movement ,or change of external
condition, of a system of parts that has an
internal cause , and is adaptive
7Component of Behavior
8Innate behavior-inherited,instinctive behavior
- Programmed by genes
- Highly stereotyped(similar each time in many
individuals) - Four categories
- Kinesis change the speed of random movement in
response to environmental stimulus -
9Innate behavior-inherited,instinctive
- Taxis a directed movement toward or away from a
stimulus positive and negative taxes - Reflex movement of a body part in response to
stimulus - Fixed action pattern (FAP) Stereotyped and
often complex series of movement, response to a
specific stimulus
10Innate behavior-inherited,instinctive behavior
- Programmed response to a stimulus
- Stimulus of FAP releaser, sometime called
sign stimulus - Examples
- Courtship behavior
- Rhythms-daily (circadian) annual (circanual)
11Learning behavior
- Main questions for the study of animal behavior.
- What is the causation of the behavior?
- What is the function of the behavior?
- How does that behavior develop during ontogeny?
- How did that behavior evolve?
12Why do birds sit on the eggs?
Why do birds sit on the eggs?
Why do birds sit on the eggs?
Why do birds sit on the eggs?
13Interest in Animal Behavior
- Early Humans
- Early hominids and Homo erectus practiced a crude
variety of hunting. - Pecking man, 400,000 years ago, was accomplished
hunter and user of fire and made tools from
animal bones.
14Interest in Animal Behavior
- Early Homo sapiens must have been keen observers
of animal habits and characteristics. - They needed to be familiar with the behavior of
animal. - They needed to know where and how to hunt their
preys, and also protect themselves from potential
predators. -
15Interest in Animal Behavior
- Prehistoric cave painting in France and Spain
reveal other aspect of humankinds relationship
to animal. - Classical world
- Interest in animal behavior stemmed from
curiosity about natural phenomena and a desire to
record and categorized observation.
16Why do we study animal behavior?
- Sense of wonder
- Like any science amazing phenomena begging
description - Saving endangered species
- E.g. homing behavior in salmon
17Why do we study animal behavior?
- Self-knowledge
- The scientific study in animal of aggression,
altruism - Universal laws of life
- Martian life?
- Applications
18Dog owners studied
- Companionship owners (27)
- Valued Object owners (19)
19Animal Behavior and Veterinary Medicine
- Animal behavior in small animal practices
- Failure of veterinarians to provide advice on
behavior problems presented by per owners has
resulted in an increase in non-qualified
individuals practicing as animal psychiatrists - Many veterinarians are unware of basic principle
of animal behavior
20Animal Behavior and Veterinary Medicine
- Many behavioral disorder may arise as a result of
abnormal social relationship with the owner,
improper training in early life, or result from
an inherited strain, or breed susceptibility - Aggressive, hyperemotional dog ----? some cure
by applying basic principle of animal behavior
21Animal Behavior and Veterinary Medicine
- Critical period
- ------? the best age to take a pup as a pet and
socialize him - ------? experiences during critical period may
have profound and permanent effects on subsequent
behavior and contribute to a wide range of
behavior disorder in later life
22Animal Behavior in Large Animal Practice
- the clinician is on many occasions in a difficult
position to make a diagnosis or prognosis because
of lacking a basic knowledge of normal behavior - Abnormal behavior pattern give the veterinarians
the basic clinical sign of abnormality (due to
either disease, trauma, or emotional disturbances)
23Animal Behavior in Large Animal Practice(cont.)
- Knowledge of animal behavior would facilitate
handling and transportation of livestock and in
selecting suitable breeds ------? more suited
behaviorally to the method of husbandry, climate
and grazing method. - Many disorder affecting the productivity of
domestic stock may have an underlying behavioral
basic
24Animal Behavior in Large Animal Practice (cont.)
- Animal behavior has proven to be an essential
area of research both in helping to evaluate the
welfare of animals in different housing system,
and in developing alternative system that
maintain high levels of production while
increasing animal welfare. - Ethological research can help solve many basic
production problems.
25Zoo and Laboratory AnimalMedicine
- The state of wild animal in captivity in most
zoos in civilized countries is deplorable, in
terms of abnormal behavior, behavioral
degeneration, and stereotyped ------? stereotyped
neurotic behavior patterns - In laboratory, behavior problems arise in dealing
with newly acquired species
26Animal Behavior in Large Animal Practice (cont.)
- Studying in wildlife behavior have been
undertaken in their natural environment give
information of a basic and essential if we are to
know the nutritional and behavior requirements of
the same species in captivity - Overcrowding in captivity increases aggression in
many animal, but without the basic in formation
as to their territorial
27Animal Behavior in Large Animal Practice (cont.)
- requirements and normal social behavior -------?
incorrectly conclude that such animal are highly
aggression and antisocial (actually in
nature---?actually social and rarely display
intra-species aggression) - Veterinarians are becoming involved in other
fields - Preservation (endangered species)
- Control of wild game
28History of Animal Behavior
- Mid 1800s
- Scientist such as Darwin, suggested that all
organism were interrelated, that different
organisms, including humans, derived/evolved from
common ancestors - Mendel is credited with introducing the idea of
inheritance
29History of Animal Behavior
- Late 1800s
- Scientists began struggling with the neural basic
of behavior - Early 1900s
- Several scientists especially Konrad Lorenz, Niko
Tinbergen, and behavior can innate, born with
rather than learned.
30Niko Tinbergen
Konrad Lorenz
Karl von Frisch
Nobel prize in Medicine and Physiology
31History of Animal Behavior
- Ethology describing animal behavior in nature
and tending to focus on behaviors that were most
likely inherited rather than learned - Mid 1900s
- Ethology combined with neurobiology Neuroethology
32History of Animal Behavior
- Efforts to understanding the neural
neurocircuitry that response was responsible for
behavior - Present
- All of these efforts interweave with
computational(computer) and theoretical
scientists seeking to understand complex brain
function/cognition. Language, emotion, learning,
memory.
33Foundations of Animal Behavior
- Theory of evolution by natural selection
- although each animal species has a high
reproductive potential, the number of animals of
a species remains relatively constant over time.
Thus there is competition for survival
34Foundations of Animal Behavior
- Only those members of species that are able to
survive to produce more offspring contribute
their characteristic to subsequent generation
through their young. - behavior, morphology and physiology were all
thought to be subjects to the effects of natural
selection
35Foundations of Animal Behavior
- Comparative method
- Romanes, the comparative method involved
studying animal to gain insight the behavior of
human.
36????????????????? George J. Romances
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37- Theories of genetics and inheritance
- Greatly influenced research in animal behavior
was the birth of the science of genetic and the
development of modern theories of inheritance
- Present day, behavioral biology is based on the
combination of evolutionary theory, which explain
how traits can change through time, and genetic,
which explain traits are passed from one
generation to another.
38- We now know, the morphological, physiological
traits, an animals behavior has a genetic
component - Thus behavior may be change as a species evolves
39Experimental Approach
- The idea, method, and theories establish during
the later half of nineteenth century form the
foundation todays experimental approaches to
study of animal behavior - Comparative psychologists and physiologists have
sought to determine the underlying causes of
behavior
40Experimental Approach
- Classical ethologists have been concluded
primarily with the functional significance and
evolutions of behavior pattern, but have also
developed explanation for behavior mechanism - Behavior ecologists have explored the
environmental context for behavior and the way in
which animal interact with their living
environments
41- Sociobiologists have applied the principles of
evolutionary biology to study of social behavior
and organization in animal - Studies of Mechanism
- Comparative psychology
- Is study of different animals behavior pattern
in order to determine the general principles that
explain their action
42- Perceptual psychology
- Involved the measurement of sensation (the
reception of stimuli through the sense sight,
hearing) - Understanding of animal behavior in terms of
what an animal make of its world, animals
interpretations of its sensation
43Applied Ethology
Modern approaches to Ethology
- Causation
- Function
- Development
- Evolution
Tinbergens 4 questions
- Welfare assessment
- Optimizing production
- Behavioral disorders
44Animal welfare
- 5 freedoms for standard animal well-being
- Freedom from hunger and thirst
- Freedom from discomfort
- Freedom from pain, injury or disease
- Freedom from fear or stress
- Freedom to perform the normal patterns of behavior
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46Indicators of animal well-being
- Specific assessment criteria (General health
status) - Clinical signs and disease and performance
- Behavior
- Neurochemical and endocrinologic factors
- Immune function
- Morphologic changes
- Animal preferences
47Applied animal behavior (cont.)
- Optimizing production
- Handle animal with specific animal requirement
feeding rhythm, territory - Behavior disorders
- Central aspect of applied ethology
48Behavior measures during veterinary examination
- Used during clinical appraisal, generally
qualitative presence or absence of certain kind
of behavior is noted - Animal attitude, deposition and temperament
should be assessed before any handling is
performed
49Behavior measures during veterinary examination
- Reflex response to localized pained such as skin
pricking or pinching may be noted -----? to
determine nerve function - Behavioral items of self maintenance such as
feeding and body care - Body care behavior often cease as a first sign of
sickness
50Ethology
- Observing wild animals in nature Europe
naturalistic biologist. - Ethogram
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51Design features in animal behavior studies
- necessary to have a basic understanding of the
thought processes to formulate hypothesis and
design experiment to test hypothesis. - ?we will consider the design of an investigation
of the effect of testosterone on an aggression
behavior in male Mongolian gerbil.
52Design features in animal behavior studies
- Our test animal will be
- Intact male gerbil
- Castrated male
- Castrated male given testosterone
53Definition and records
- All observe must record similar behavior in
exactly the same way - Film, photograph or drawing often provide written
definitions of behavior pattern - Inter-observer reliability test
- Correlation -- positive good agreement
54Design of the experiment
- Hypothesis formulation
- Experimental hypothesis
- are idea that developed by counting the reported
investigation of other scientist with our own
ides - is aggression in adult male gerbil development
upon the hormone testosterone
55- Designation of variable
- Independent variable
- are the factor that the investigator has
manipulated to define the treatment group and
condition of experiment
56- Dependent variable
- are the measure of behavior pattern that are
observed and recorded - aggression
- Control group
- is an un-manipulated set
57- Sample size
- each experiment treatment group must contain
enough animal to provide a complete and accurate
assessment of behavior - most statistical test require a certain minimum
sample size for correct data analysis
58Capturing, Marking, and Tracking Animal and
Animal Signs
- Capturing animal
- Capture -- to make the animal for
identification - --- measure size, age, sex
- --- bring to laboratory for certain
portion of work
59Capturing, Marking, and Tracking Animal and
Animal Signs
- Common method
- sweep --- insect species
- mist net --- bird
- live trap --- vertebrates,
invertebrate (variety of shape
and form)
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61Capturing, Marking, and Tracking Animal and
Animal Signs
- --- can be use the capture of
almost all spp. of animal - Sein net --- fish
- Pit fall trap --- vertebrate,
invertebrate, reptile, amphibian
and mammals
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?????????????????????? ?. Mist net
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- . Nose lead
- . Nose twitch
- . Extension arm
- . Hog snare
- . Rope squeeze
- . Body squeeze
65Capturing, Marking, and Tracking Animal and
Animal Signs
- electroshock --- aquatic habitats
- CO2 cartridge gun
- tranquillizer dart
- Animal marking
- To be able to identify individual animal
dominant, mating, animal care.
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66Capturing, Marking, and Tracking Animal and
Animal Signs
- Techiques include
- Coat color pattern in zebra, Holstein cow
- Variation in physical characteristic, scar
- Tagging nature and location will vary with
species
67Capturing, Marking, and Tracking Animal and
Animal Signs
- Plastic leg band --- bird
- Fin clip, fingerling tag --- fish
- Toe clip, dye mark, tattoo --- mammal
- Small dot of paint or dye on invertebrate
- Radioisotope --- either collar or band,
subcutaneous implant
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71Capturing, Marking, and Tracking Animal and
Animal Signs
- Tracking animal
- Radiotransmitter --- bird,
lizard, rodent,
whale, elephant - Vehicles --- airplane --- bird
- --- boat, driving gear
- --- aquatic animals
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73Capturing, Marking, and Tracking Animal and
Animal Signs
- Shark and Bake method --- using a finely power
fluorescence dye - Animal sign
- Help to interpret their behavior (except aquatic
animal) - Fecal material, impression of feet
- Determine --- direction of movement
- --- group size, sex, diet, net size
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75Sampling and Measuring
- Mush detail from direct observation is required
then it will be possible to observe only one
animal at time - Appropriate sampling method --- data on several
animal at once can be collected, but information
about each individual is lost by sampling
76The information about one kind of behavior which
can be obtain from observation and record as
- Presence or absence
- Frequency of occurrence
- Duration of each bout of each activity
- Intensity of activity
- Timing and nature of subsequence activity
77Appropriate measure
- continuous recording --- recording aid
- behavior sampling or conspicuous behavior
recording involves continuous observation of
animal but recording of certain kinds of behavior
only - point sampling or instantaneous sampling
78 Appropriate measure
- period occurrence record - event which have
occurred a predetermined time period are
recorded at the end of the period
79Appropriate measure
Recording aid Field study
80Applied Animal Behavior
- the scope of applied animal behavior now
generally include investigation of behavior for - domestic livestock
- companions animals (pets)
- the large variety of animals kept in zoological
park and aquaria
81Applied Animal Behavior
- studies involving exotic animals in captivity
have been quite important with regard to
conservation efforts for a number of species. - The study include the same types of
investigations of behavior carried out by others
doing animal behavior work
82Applied Animal Behavior
- i.e., studies of physiological aspect of
behavior, development, communications,
aggression, etc. - exploration of problems with companion animal
--- pet psychology - the effect of domestication in animals and the
effects of captivity in their behavior
83Applied Animal Behavior
- Medical science --- animal model
- The effects of conditions under which we house
and breed these stock of mice, rats, dogs,
primates and others.
84- Method and approaches used today in applied
animal behavior are mixture of ethology,
comparative psychology behavioral ecology and
sociobiology.