Title: Animal Behavior : Ethology
1Animal Behavior Ethology
- Chapter 51
- Pgs. 1106-1133
2Key Things to Remember for Lab 13-Invertebrate
Behavior
- Be sure to have an introduction/background
discussing key characteristics complete
description of your invertebrate - Be sure to have a research question
- Clear hypothesis relating the independent and
dependent variables - Must have a control Ex. Organisms in the chamber
with nothing else present - Experimental Design methods must have any and
all revisions you did w/diagram or picture - Minimum of three trials and 20 organisms for each
trial - Data table with title, units of measurements, and
error - Analysis of data probably need to determine the
overall mean and do a Chi-square analysis
3Experiment example
- Earthworm reactions toward different substrates
- Cotton and sandpaper
- Must do experimental trials (3) with just the
chamber and the animals (control) - Three separate experiments can be done
- Empty chamber Cotton
- Empty chamber Sandpaper
- Cotton, empty (plain) chamber, and sandpaper
- Minimum of three trials for each experiment
must be done.
4Statistical Tools to Analyze results
- Chi-Square Will tell you how much your data is
different from expected (calculated) results. It
is Non-Parametric and deals with different
catagories. - Formula ? 2 ? (o e)2
- e
- ?2 what we are solving
- o observed value
- e expected (calculated value)
5Accepting or Rejecting your hypothesis?
- plt0.05 is accepted as being significant
- Accepting the Null (H0) means that there is NO
SIGNIFICANT difference between the observed and
expected value (plt0.05). Chance alone can explain
the differences observed. - Rejecting the Null (H0) means that the
observations are significantly different from the
expectations. (pgt0.05). Evaluate the results.
6Solving Question 3
- Formula ?2 ? (o e)2
- e
- Degrees of Freedom Critical Value
- 1 3.84
- 2 5.99
- 3 7.81
- 4 9.49
- 5 11.07
7Animal Behavior Ethology
- Chapter 51
- Pgs. 1106-1133
8Video Inside the Animal Mind (Pt. I)Text pgs
1114-1125
- I. Name three types of learning mentioned in the
video - II. Give an example for each of the three
learning types that was presented. - III. What was the most fascinating type of
learning you saw? - IV. Give one situation from the video that you
were not aware of before watching the video. - Give TEN Key statements (numbered)
- Give FIVE questions you have after watching the
video.
9Five Types Learning
- Changes in behavior that caused by an experience
a-ha experience - Five general types of learning
- Imprinting (pg. 1108)
- Associative
- Operant conditioning (pg. 1117)
- Classical conditioning (pg. 1116)
- Habituation (pg. 1115)
- Insight Learning (pg. 1116)
- Cognitive
10Introductory Questions 3
- 1) How are proximate causes different from
ultimate causes of behavior - 2) Name four different types of learning and
provide one example of each. - 3) Which type of learning is more complex than
the others. Why? - How is habituation different from any other type
of learning? - How do circadian rhythms effect behavior?
- Name three ways in which animals communicate.
11Defining Behavior-Ethology
- Involves how organisms react (respond) and cope
to the stimuli from the environment. Everything
an animal does. - Two types of Explanations
- Proximate Causes
- -focuses on the how a behavior is formed
- -triggered by environmental stimuli
- -involves genetic, physiological, anatomical
mechanisms. - Ultimate causes
- -focuses on why a behavior occurs.
- -evolutionary significance evolutionary
explanations - -Long term purpose for the behavior
- Modifications of behavior occur through learning
- There are five different types of Learning
12Example of Proximate Ultimate Questions about
Behavior
- See pg. 1107 read the example of the
red-crowned crane. - What is the Proximate Question?
- How does day length influence the breeding
of the red-crowned cranes? - What is a reasonable hypothesis?
- Breeding is most productive during the spring
and early summer. - What would be an Ultimate Question you could
address about this behavior? - Why did natural selection favor this behavior
and not a different one? - What would be a reasonable hypothesis? Fitness is
improved for a particular reason
13Evolutionary link to Behavior
- Animals are expected to behave in ways to
maximize their fitness (optimum behavior) - What is the genetic influence?
- Ex. Lovebirds a repertoire of song types
- Why has natural selection favored multisong
behavior? - Poss hypothesis A repertoire of songs makes
older, more experienced males more attractive to
females. - Testable predictions males learn more songs as
they get older so - The repertoire of songs is an indicator of age
- Females prefer to mate with males having large
repertoire of songs - actual outcome some songbirds show their
correlation while others dont.
14Instinct Behavior (pg. 1110)
- Controlled by strong genetic influences
- Inborn
- Animals dont have to witness the behavior
- Unlearned
- Triggered by the environment (sign stimulus or a
releaser) - Inherited neurological circuitry that directs
behavior - Examples
- Kinesis Taxis-change in activity in response to
stimuli - Migration
- Signals Communication (pheromones)
- Fixed Action patterns (FAP) observed in the
Graylag goose egg rolling
15Egg Rolling w/Graylag Goose
Ex. of Fixed Action Pattern action is carried
out to completion
16Tinbergens Sand Wasp Experiment
Nest finding behavior of wasps responding to the
arrangement of the cones rather than the cones
themselves Spatial Learning
Pg. 1115
17Imprinting (pg. 1098)
- Early recognition of the same group
- Acquired during a limited critical period
- Occurs right after birth
- Forms from the parent-offspring bond
- Small window of time where the offspring react to
some animal or object. - Commonly seen with birds
- Ex. Konrad Lorenz duck hatchlings
- Human infants
- Grasping -smiling w/parent
- cheek feeding -Babinski reflex
18Classical Conditioning(pg. 1116)
- Associative learning between normal body
condition and a new stimulus - Pavlov (dog salivation with a ringing bell)
- Can opener w/dogs and cats
19Pavlovs Classical Conditioning
20Operant Conditioning (pg. 1099)
- Instrumental conditioning
- Trial Error
- The animal must do something to gain a reward
(food) - Use positive negative reinforcement
- Skinner Expts w/Rats (lever Food)
21Insight Learning (pg. 1099-1100)
- Most complex type of learning (video)
- Animal solves a problem
- Requires past experiences
- Need to make associations with objects and what
can be done with them - Chimps the hanging banana
22Insight Associative Learning
23Habituation (pg. 1100)
- Animals learn not to respond to a stimulus
- The response gets ignored despite the stimulus
- Ex. Hydra stops contracting if disturbed too
often by water currents
24Other Social Behaviors
- Agnostic aggressive behavior usually resulting
from competition of resources - Dominance heirarchy pecking order
- largest male leader in the group
- Territorality protection of its own area
- Defending the area from invaders
- Altruistic unselfish behavior that benefits
another in the same group at the expense of that
individual. - Courtship Sexual Selection (pg. 1129-1131)
25Pheromones
- Very specific (species)
- Triggers hormonal activity
- Communicates danger, attraction to others
- In vertebrates pheromones can effect sexual
cycles and reproductive behavior, choice in mate. - Known to synchronize menstrual cycles
- Used in perfumes and fragrances
26Introductory Questions 3
- 1) How are proximate causes different from
ultimate causes of behavior - 2) Name four different types of learning and
provide one example of each. - 3) Which type of learning is more complex than
the others. Why? - How is habituation different from any other type
of learning? - How do circadian rhythms effect behavior?
- Name three ways in which animals communicate.
27Foraging (pg. 1119)
- Behavior associated with recognizing, searching,
capturing, and consuming food. - Food habits are part of the animals niche
- Can be shaped by competition
- It is a compromise between benefits and costs
(energetically) - Natural selection dictates minimizing costs
Max. benefits - What are some of the Costs and Benefits of
Foraging? - Optimal foraging weighs the benefits and costs .
Do animals weight the trade off? See info about
the Bluegill fish and Daphnia. (pg. 1122-1123)
When the prey density is high what does the blue
gill concentrate on? Did they become more or
less selective?
28Effects of the Environment on Foraging Behavior
- What did Susan Riechert discover about the
Agelenopsis aperta spiders in regards to their
attack times while inhabiting a riparian forest
vs. arid habitats? (pgs 1119-1120)
29Communication Observed with Bees
- Observed by Karl Frisch (1940s)
- Scouts Signal to others that food is nearby and
relative location - Round Dance Simply signals to others that food
is nearby (no direction or distance)-used for
short distances from the hive and excites the
bees to fly in all directions (approx. 50 m) - Waggle Dance Used for longer distances and
performs a figure eight path. This path
communicates both the distance and direction
using the sun, the hive, and the food source as
reference points.
30Round Dance Waggle Dance
31Communication
- Necessary for social behavior
- Animals can use the following methods
- Auditory
- Visual
- Tactile
- Chemical (pheromones)
- Electrical
32Final Note
- All behavior is based on responding to the
environment (external stimuli) and is dependent
on receiving/responding using specialized cells
called sensory neurons - Next topic Exploring the senses CH. 49
33Key Terms People
- Innate vs. Learned Behavior
- Proximate vs. Ultimate causes
- FAP (fixed action patterns) - graylag goose egg
rolling - Tinbergens wasp Experiment
- Habituation
- Imprinting
- Positive Negative reinforcement
- Classical conditioning (Pavlov experiment)
- Operant conditioning
- Insight learning (problem solving w/chimps)
- Circadian Rhythms
- Migration
- Communication Pheromones
- Sexual Selection Dominance heirarchy
- Round dance Waggle dance (honey bees)
34Introductory Questions 4 (Ch. 49)
- Name five different types of specialized neurons
used to receive external stimuli. What is sensed
by a nocioreceptor? What is substance P? What
substance can be used to block the release of
substance P? (See pg. 1048-1049) - What are the five basic senses in humans? Match
one of these five with each structure listed
below - -olfactory -statoliths
- -pacinain corpuscle -oval window
- -rods cones -taste buds
- -lateral line system -rhodopsin
- -saccule utricle (otoliths) -incus stapes
- -sclera, cornea, retina -vitreous humor
- -tectorial, basilar, tympanic membranes