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Chapter 32 Animal Behavior

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Title: Chapter 32 Animal Behavior


1
Chapter 32 Animal Behavior
  • Modern Biology

1. Most of the pictures used in this presentation
are adapted and/or modified from BIOLOGY
Understanding Life Third ed., Sandra Alters,
(2000) Jones and Barelett Publishers. 2. This
presentation is used for the course Modern
Biology only. 3. Please DO NOT distribute this
presentation without authorization.
2
Researchers from various disciplines study
animal behavior
  • 32.1 The history of the study of animal behavior
  • 32.2 The link between genetics and behavior

3
32.1 The history of the study of animal behavior
  • Animals continually exhibit a wide range of
    behaviors.
  • Behavior patterns of movement, sounds, body
    postures, or any type of change exhibited by an
    animal
  • Behaviors also include any type of change in an
    animal, such as coloration or releasing of a
    scent.

4
Two Types of Behaviors
  • There are two types of behaviors simplex and
    complex behaviors.
  • Animal behaviorists study mechanisms of behavior
    and evolutionary basis for them.
  • Animals behaviors are referred as being part of
    an animals equipment for survival.

5
Simplex Types of Behavior
  • Simplex behaviors are simple, automatic responses
    to environmental stimuli.
  • Bacteria moves toward nutrient
  • Response to avoid car accident

6
Complex Behavior
  • Complex behaviors are innate responses to learned
    behavior which are limited to multicellular
    animals that can sense stimuli,

process the stimuli, and send out appropriate
motor impulses.
7
32.2 The link between geneticsand behavior
  • Behaviors depend on neurophysiological mechanisms
    so genes must be involved in the development of
    behavior
  • Evidence for genetic regulation of mating
    behaviors in Drosophila having a mutant
    sex-linked gene termed yellow.

8
How Proteins Influence the Behaviors?
  • Peptide hormone acts as neurotransmitter
  • Hormone receptors allow response to hormones
  • Activate ion channel and change neural
    sensitivity
  • Pigments change perception
  • Neural growth factor alters development
  • Control gene regulation

9
Innate Behavior
  • Innate behaviors are neural programs developed at
    time of birth or at an appropriate point in
    maturation.
  • The innate behaviors are performed correctly
    first time they are exhibited.
  • Innate behaviors help animals stay alive in
    certain situation and provide adaptive advantage
    during reproduction.

10
Learned Behavior
  • Learned behaviors acquired by experience
  • Both genetic factors and the experience of the
    individual influence many aspect of behavior.

11
Innate behaviors are performed correctly the
first time they are attempted
  • 32.3 Coordination and orientation behaviors
  • 32.4 Fixed action patterns

12
32.3 Coordination and orientation behaviors
  • Coordination specific movements which result in
    effective responses to stimuli
  • reflex is the simplest type of coordination
  • Orientation movements oriented in relation to
    external stimuli
  • kinesis and taxes are representatives of this
    type behavior.

13
Coordination Behavior
  • A reflex is an automatic response to nerve
    stimulation.
  • In human body, knee jerk is the simplest types
    of reflexes.
  • In complex organisms, reflex plays a role in
    survival
  • Most of behaviors of cnidarian are results of
    reflexes.

14
Orientation Behavior Kineses
  • Kineses is a change in speed of the random
    movements of animal with respect to changes in
    certain environmental stimuli.
  • Pillbugs living under the rotting log

15
Orientation Behavior Taxes
  • Taxis movement directed toward or away from
    stimulus, such as light, chemical, or heat.
  • Animals have programmed taxes also have receptors
    that sense the particular stimuli.

16
  • Female mosquitoes and itcks have sensory
    receptors that detect warmth, moisture, and
    certain chemicals emitted by mammals.
  • Only the female mosquito bites. She needs the
    protein from blood to develop her eggs.

17
Phototaxis and Gravitaxis
  • Insects flying around the light is another
    example of taxis called phototaxis.
  • Common cockroaches tend to avoid the light and
    hence are negative phototactic.

18
Orientation behavior of fish
Fish swim upright by orienting their ventral side
to gravity and their dorsal side to light.
19
Taxis in a Salmon
  • Trout and salmon automatically orient against a
    curent and therefore face and swim upstream.

20
32.4 Fixed action patterns
  • Fixed action patterns are Innate, complex,
    species-specific behaviors elicited by specific
    stimulus
  • EX body maintenance courtship nest building,
    and food behavior

21
  • Sometimes fixed action behaviors seem logical but
    they are instinctive, not cognitive
  • EX greylag goose egg retrieval movements

22
Some animals can change their behaviors based on
experience
  • 32.5 Learned behaviors and survival
  • 32.6 Types of learning

23
Instinctive Behavior
  • Instinctive behavior important for survival, but
    cannot be changed in response to the change of
    environment.

The survival of the tropical frog depends on the
coloration and its instinct behavior of
remaining complete stillness.
24
32.5 Learned behaviors and survival
  • Learned behavior adaptation to changing
    conditions based on experience
  • Behaviorism automatic and machinelike rote
    learning in a stimulus/response fashion
  • Cognitivism continual acquisition, storage,
    and merging of old and new information leading to
    new types of learned behavior

25
32.6 Types of learning
  • Learned behaviors can help an animal become
    better suited to a particular environment or set
    of conditions.
  • Five categories of learned behavior imprinting
  • habituation
  • classical conditioning
  • trial-and-error learning
  • insight.

26
Imprinting
  • Imprinting is a rapid and irreversible type of
    learning that takes place during an early
    developmental stage of some animals.
  • Object imprinting has been observed in birds.

27
  • Parent-offspring imprinting enhances reproductive
    fitness by allowing parents and offspring to
    recognize on another, enable parents to care for
    their offspring.
  • Imprinting tends to occur in species that have a
    social organization in which attachment to
    parents or to family group is important.

28
Locality Imprinting
  • Migrating birds and fishes learn to recognize
    their birthplace by locality imprinting.
  • Pacific salmon are imprinted with the odor of the
    stream or lake in which they were born.

29
Habituation
  • Habituation is the ability of animals to get use
    to to certain types of stimuli.
  • Learning to ignore unimportant stimuli is a
    critical ability in an animal confronting a
    barrage of stimuli in a complex environment and
    can help an animal conserve its energy.

30
  • City pigeons are undisturbed by noise.
  • Young chicks stop crouching as familiar-shaped
    birds fly overhead.

31
Classical Conditioning
  • Classical conditioning associate a new stimulus
    with a natural stimulus that normally evokes a
    response in the animal.
  • Eventually the animal will respond to the new
    stimulus alone.
  • The classical conditioning must be reinforced
    periodically with the presence of natural
    stimulus.

32
Condition Salivation
  • Pavlov found that dog had learned to salivate in
    response to unrelated stimuli, such as light,
    tuning fork, and bell.

33
  • The natural stimulus-response connection is an
    inborn reflex, or an unconditioned response.
  • Many unconditioned responses, such as blinking,
    sneezing, vomiting, and coughing, are protective
    to animals.
  • This type of responses can most often be modified
    and directed by the processes of learning.

34
Trial-and-Error Learning
  • Trial-and-Error (Operant conditioning) is a more
    complex form of learning in which an
  • animal associates
  • something that it
  • does with a reward
  • or punishment.

35
  • In operant conditioning, an animal must make the
    proper association between its response and a
    reward and learn to avoid a behavior when the
    stimulus is negative.
  • Operant conditioning works only for stimuli and
    responses that have meaning for animals in nature.

36
Insight
  • Insight or reasoning is the most complex form
    of learning that is best developed in primate,
    such as chimps and human.
  • Therefore, the animal is able to perform a
    correct or appropriate behavior the first it
    tries.

37
  • An animal capable of insight can recognize a
    problem and solve it mentally before ever trying
    out a solution.

38
Animals exhibit regularlyrepeated behaviors
  • 32.7 Circadian rhythms and biological clocks
  • 32.8 Migration

39
32.7 Circadian Rhythms and Biological Clocks
  • Organisms including animals, plants, protists,
    fungi, and bacteria have internal biological
    clocks that regulate many of their activities.
  • This 24-hour cycles of physiological activity and
    behavior are called circadian rhythms.

40
Circadian rhythms
  • Govern patterns such as sleep and wake cycles,
    feeding patterns, migrations, etc.
  • Are regulated by organisms biological clocks
  • Use environmental cues such as light,
    temperature, magnetic fields to keep the internal
    clock timed to the outside world.

41
Circadian Rhythms is under Genetic Control
  • A gene called CLOCK regulate the cyclical
    patterns of behavior and physiology (circadian
    rhythm) in mammals.
  • CLOCK-BMAL1 complex induces the transcription of
    CLOCK.
  • The accumulation of CLOCK turns off CLOCK
    expression.
  • Gene inactivation, in turn, triggers the activity
    of CLOCK-BMAL1 complex and hence CLOCK expression.

42
32.8 Migration
  • Migration is a movement of animals from region to
    region with the change of season.
  • Biological clocks and environmental cues work
    together
  • Triggers day length, seasonal temperature
    changes, physiological and hormonal changes in
    animal
  • Navigation orientation to an environmental cue,
    such as sun, stars, or magnetic field

43
Migration of Golden Plover
American golden plover flies from arctic breeding
grounds to wintering areas in southeastern South
America, a distance of around 13,000 km.
44
Monarch ButterflyMigrating Insect
  • Monarch butterfly travel long distances (3000
    km) from the eastern United States to Mexico.
  • The shorter day and colder temperature of late
    August results in the delayed maturity of monarch
    butterfly.

45
Social behaviors ultimately aid the reproductive
fitness of individuals
  • 32.9 Communication via social behaviors
  • 32.10 Competitive behaviors
  • 32.11 Reproductive behaviors
  • 32.12 Parenting behaviors and altruism
  • 32.13 Group behaviors
  • 32.14 Human behavior

46
Communication via social behaviors
  • Social behaviors help members of the same
    species communicate and interact.

Grooming in chimps consists of the cleaning of
dirt, debris and sometimes parasitic insects from
the body.
47
  • Advantages
  • Reproduction
  • Care of offspring
  • Defense of a territory
  • Obtaining food
  • Defending against predators

48
32.10 Competitive behaviors
  • Used when two or more individuals want same
    scarce resource (food, water, mate)
  • Threat displays
  • Submissive behavior
  • Territorial behavior
  • Consequences
  • Establishment of new populations
  • Most fit have resources to reproduce

49
Threat Displays
  • Many animals exhibit threat or intimidation
    displays during competition.
  • To scare other animals away or cause them of
    back down before fighting takes place.

50
Ways of Intimidation display
  • Intimidation display usually involve behaviors of
    showing fangs or claws, making noises, changing
    body color to one that is a releaser of
    aggression, and making body appear larger
    (standing upright, making the fur or hair stand
    on end)

51
  • Threat displays are important social signals and
    communicate the intent to fight.
  • Some of the movements and body postures (body
    language) of threat displays that repel
    competitors also attract members of the opposite
    gender.

52
Submissive Behavior
  • Some animals use submissive behavior to avoid
    fight.
  • The submissive behavior is usually a behavior
    opposite to a threat display.
  • If an animal is losing a fight, it might

53
Territorial Behavior
  • A territory is an area that an animal marks off
    as its own, defending it against species.
  • These behaviors are called territorial behavior.
  • Members of opposite gender are sometimes allowed
    into the territory, often for mating purpose.

54
32.11 Reproductive behaviors
  • Sexual reproduction
  • produces genetic variability among organisms of
    the same species
  • increases chances of adaptation and survival of
    individuals of a species
  • requires mating behaviors based on communication
    and cooperation

55
Courtship
  • Fixed pattern courtship rituals are
    species-specific and lead to mating
  • Male behaviors which attract female
  • Mark and aggressively defend territory
  • Display attractive body colors or patterns
  • Emit noises or songs as mating calls
  • Ritual dances
  • Odors attractive to females

56
32.12 Parenting behaviors and altruism
  • Altruistic behaviors benefit one individual at
    the cost of another
  • Parenting behaviors allow young to survive and
    reproduce
  • Parenting Activities
  • Build protective structure for young
  • Provide food
  • Defend nest

57
32.13 Group behaviors
  • Social groups (temporary or permanent) work for
    common good of a species
  • Individuals within the group
  • have more protection against predators
  • warn each other of danger
  • protect all young together
  • obtain food together
  • more efficient division of work by activity
  • may be ranked in a social hierarchy

58
32.14 Human behavior
  • Study of human sociobiology has inherent
    limitations
  • cannot experimentally manipulate genes
  • cannot vary environments of humans for scientific
    studies
  • Nature v. Nurture dichotomy
  • genes specify behavioral capacity
  • environment shapes use of that capacity for
    learning
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