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Behavioral Biology

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Title: Behavioral Biology


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Behavioral Ecology
  • Behavioral ecology emphasizes evolutionary
    hypotheses
  • Behavioral ecology is the research field that
    views behavior as an evolutionary adaptation to
    the natural ecological conditions of animals.
  • We expect animals to behave in ways that maximize
    their fitness (this idea is valid only if genes
    influence behavior).
  • http//biosci.usc.edu/courses/2002-fall/documents/
    bisc121-fuhrman_ch51.ppt

3
For Example Bird Songs
Why has naturalselection favoreda
multi-songbehavior? http//biosci.usc.edu/courses
/2002-fall/documents/bisc121-fuhrman_ch51.ppt
It may be advantageous for males attracting
females - earlier mating
4
Proximate vs. Ultimate
  • Behavior has both proximate and ultimate causes
  • Proximate questions are mechanistic, concerned
    with the environmental stimuli that trigger a
    behavior, as well as the genetic and
    physiological mechanisms underlying a behavioral
    act.
  • Ultimate questions address the evolutionary
    significance for a behavior and why natural
    selection favors this behavior.
  • http//biosci.usc.edu/courses/2002-fall/documents/
    bisc121-fuhrman_ch51.ppt

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Ethology
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Innate Behaviors
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Innate Behaviors
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Fixed Action Patterns (FAPs)
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Sign Stimulus (Releaser)
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Supra-Normal Sign Stimulus
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Love a FAP? (Harlow)
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Imprinting
  • Imprinting is the recognition, response, and
    attachment of young to a particular adult or
    object.
  • Konrad Lorenz experimented with geese that spent
    the first hours of their life with him and after
    time responded to him as their parent.
  • Lorenz isolated geese after hatching and found
    that they could no longer imprint on anything.
  • http//biosci.usc.edu/courses/2002-fall/documents/
    bisc121-fuhrman_ch51.ppt

13
Imprinting Stimulus
What is innatein these birds is the ability to
respond to a parent figure while the
outsideworld providesthe imprintingstimulus.htt
p//biosci.usc.edu/courses/2002-fall/documents/bis
c121-fuhrman_ch51.ppt
The Sensitive Period is a limited phase in an
individual animals development when learning
particular behaviors can take place.http//biosci.
usc.edu/courses/2002-fall/documents/bisc121-fuhrma
n_ch51.ppt
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Learning
Learning is the modificationof behavior
resulting fromspecific experiences
http//biosci.usc.edu/courses/2002-fall/documents/
bisc121-fuhrman_ch51.ppt
15
Maturation
Maturation is the situation in which a behavior
may improve because of ongoing developmental
changes in neuromuscular systems, for example,
flight in birds http//biosci.usc.edu/courses/2002
-fall/documents/bisc121-fuhrman_ch51.ppt
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Habituation
  • Habituation is a kind of learning
  • Habituation involves a loss of responsiveness to
    unimportant stimuli or stimuli that do not
    provide appropriate feedback.
  • For example, some animals stop responding to
    warning signals if signals are not followed by a
    predator attack (the cry-wolf effect).
  • http//biosci.usc.edu/courses/2002-fall/documents/
    bisc121-fuhrman_ch51.ppt

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Habituation
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Classical Conditioning
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Operant Conditioning
This is called trial-and-error learning - an
animal learns to associate one of its own
behaviors with a reward or a punishment
http//biosci.usc.edu/courses/2002-fall/documents/
bisc121-fuhrman_ch51.ppt
21
Observational Learning
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Cognition (Special/Insight Learning)
Cognition is the ability of ananimals nervous
system toperceive, store, process, anduse
information gathered by sensory receptors
http//biosci.usc.edu/courses/2002-fall/documents/
bisc121-fuhrman_ch51.pp
23
Play
  • Practice?
  • Exercise?
  • Socialization? (building/testing of bonds)
  • The Excessive Energy of Youth?

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Learning across Phyla
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Moving Behaviors!
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Moving Behaviors
  • Kinesis Activity only when stimulus is present,
    but activity is random (a.k.a., not moving only
    when happy)
  • Taxis Movement up or down a gradient, i.e.,
    towards something good or a way from something
    bad
  • Migration Regular (e.g., annual) movement back
    and forth from place to place
  • Piloting Directed movement from landmark to
    landmark requires some form of map
  • Orientation Directed movement consistently in a
    particular direction (e.g., employing compass)
  • Navigation Directed movement employing some
    combination of piloting and orientation

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Kinesis
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Kinesis
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Taxis
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Migration
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Piloting
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Orientation
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Navigation
plus
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Foraging
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Foraging
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Cost-Benefit Analysis
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Optimal Foraging Behavior
The optimal foraging theory states that natural
selection will benefit animals that maximize
their energy intake-to-expenditure ratio (most
bang for the buck).http//biosci.usc.edu/courses
/2002-fall/documents/bisc121-fuhrman_ch51.ppt
38
Search Image
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Optimal Diet Model
  • Predictions from http//www.bioscience.drexel.edu
    /Homepage/Winter2003/envr511/slides/ENVRFeb4.ppt
  • Predators should specialize when more profitable
    prey is very abundant
  • There should never be a partial preference
    (predicted for an exact balance which is rare)
  • Predators should have broader diets in poor
    environments
  • Predators should ignore poor quality items
    irrespective of abundance

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Specialist vs. Generalist
  • To eat or not to eat! http//www.bioscience.drexel
    .edu/Homepage/Winter2003/envr511/slides/ENVRFeb4.p
    pt
  • 2 Basic strategies
  • Generalist
  • Broad diet, consume most of the prey they
    encounter
  • Spend little time searching
  • Diet includes low quality food
  • Specialist
  • Narrow diet, consume specific prey
  • Only high quality food
  • Search time high

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Social Behavior
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Sociobiology
  • Social Behaviors are interactions between
    conspecifics
  • Sociobiology is the application of evolutionary
    theory to our understanding of social behaviors
  • These behaviors include
  • Fighting (and dominance hierarchies and
    maintaining territories)
  • Courting and Mating
  • Raising progeny
  • Cooperating (and Defecting)

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Agonistic Behavior
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Hierarchies Territoriality
  • Dominance Hierarchies are found among chickens,
    wolves, humans, etc.
  • The idea is to avoid fighting by knowing your
    place
  • to avoid picking on conspecifics that you know
    have already whooped ya
  • Territories are maintained in part as a means of
    reducing aggressive interactions
  • An animal can avoid fighting by avoiding a
    conspecifics territory
  • Fighting tends to occur mostly between
    conspecifics since same species are both better
    matched and more likely competitors (e.g., for
    food or mates)

45
Mating/Courtship Behavior
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Differential Parental Investment
  • Females Cost of egg, Cost of pregnancy
    (mammals), Cost lactating (mammals), Cost of
    raising (mostly mammals birds)
  • Males Sperm relatively cheap, Usually no
    pregnancy (sea horses exception), No lactation,
    Often no raising (some birds and humans
    exceptions), but
  • Males Paternity not assured, particularly given
    internal fertilization

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Mating Systems
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Mating Systems
  • Promiscuous low likelihood of subsequent mating
    with same individual
  • Monogamous high likelihood of subsequent mating
    with one individual
  • Polygamous high likelihood of subsequent mating
    with more than one individual
  • Polygyny one male mates with several females
  • Polyandry one female mates with several males

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Altruism/Cooperative Behavior
Altruism is Cooperative Behavior in which the
actor's Darwinian fitness is Reduced by the
behavior
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Defecting (not being altruistic)
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Prisoners Dilemma
Cooperation
Reward for Mutual Cooperation
Suckers Payoff
Defection
Temptation to Defect
Punishment for Mutual Defection
Darwinian Payoff Associated with Behavior T gt R
gt P gt S Always Preferable to Defect Why Cooperate?
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Prisoners Dilemma Examples
  • Aggressive Behavior Cost e.g., Owning /
    Carrying / Using Weapons Payoff Dominance over
    unarmed individuals (but 2 meeting without
    aggression is better than 2 with)
  • Driving SUV Costs Low fuel economy, Higher
    risk of fatal single-vehicle accidents Payoff
    Lower risk of fatality in two-vehicle accident
    (but 2 cars colliding preferable to 2 SUVs
    colliding)
  • Not Paying Taxes Payoff Enjoying benefits of
    government programs without paying for them Cost
    If everybody didnt pay taxes there wouldnt be
    any government programs (note example n-player
    dilemma)

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How can Altruism Persist?
  • Altruism is cooperative behavior in which the
    actor's Darwinian fitness is reduced by the
    behavior
  • How, then, can cooperative behavior persist?
  • Kin Selection (cooperating only with relatives)
  • Reciprocal Altruism (prisoners dilemma, TFT)
  • Group Selection (army of cooperators wins)
  • Punishment Avoidance (why we have police)

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Coefficient of Relatedness
Hamiltons Rule
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Reciprocal Altruism
Cooperation
Reward for Mutual Cooperation
Suckers Payoff
Defection
Temptation to Defect
Punishment for Mutual Defection
Darwinian Payoff Associated with Behavior T gt R
gt P gt S Therefore, RRRRR gt PPPPP
56
Tit for Tat
Cooperation
Reward for Mutual Cooperation
Suckers Payoff
Defection
Temptation to Defect
Punishment for Mutual Defection
Behavior Lead with Cooperation then do whatever
opponent does. Thus, SPPPP with All D
individuals but RRRRR with All C TFT
individuals
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Tit for Tat
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Tit for Tat
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Group Selection
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Group Selection
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Group Selection
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Group Selection
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Group Selection
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Link to Next Presentation
65
Acknowledgements
http//biosci.usc.edu/courses/2002-fall/documents/
bisc121-fuhrman_ch51.ppt Pearson Education, Inc.
publishing as Benjamin Cummings
66
Piloting
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