Title: Chapter 51 Behavioral Biology
1Chapter 51 Behavioral Biology
- Behavior what an animal does and how it does it
- (motor and nonmotor components)
2Proximate and ultimate causes of behavior
- Proximate causes are mechanistic, concerned
with environmental stimuli that trigger behavior,
as well as the genetic and physiological
mechanisms behind those behavioral acts - Ultimate causes the whys of behavior
3Genetic and Environmental Factors
- Nature/Nurture controversy how BOTH genes and
the environment influence the development of
phenotypes and thus, behavior - Today, is studied in terms of the Norm of
Reaction for a particular genotype, what
behavioral phenotypes develop in a range of
environments - Ex. Fruit flies and dg2 gene protein that
makes flies sitters or rovers - Ex. Lovebirds and tucking vs. no tucking behavior
4Figure 51.1 Genetic and environmental components
of behavior a case study
5Depression, violence, alcoholism human
behaviors and genes
- Genes and nongenetic environmental factors seem
to build on one another
6Innate behavior
- Behavior that is developmentally fixed
individuals of the same species exhibit virtually
the same behavior despite the inevitable
environmental differences within and outside
their bodies during development and throughout
life - Why developed? Contributed to fitness, so
variant gene forms were lost
7Ethology
- Research field that focused on how animals behave
in their natural habitats - Karl von Frisch, Konrad Lorenz, Niko Tinbergen
Nobel Prize in 1973 - digger wasp and nest locating
- stickleback fish and aggression
- mayflies and egg laying
- FAP fixed action pattern based on sign stimulus
8Figure 51.2 Niko Tinbergens experiments on the
digger wasps nest-locating behavior
Wasps were cued by the arrangement of the
landmarks not the physical objects themselves
9Figure 51.3 Classic demonstration of innate
behavior
10Figure 51.4 Mayflies laying eggs on human-made
surfaces
Mayflies look for polarization in reflected light
off of water asphalt and black plastic ground
coverings used in agriculture give same
appearance, and eggs will not hatch
11Behavioral Ecology
- Research field that views behavior as an
evolutionary adaptation to the natural ecological
conditions of animals. - Natural selection favors behaviors that enhance
fitness - Ex. Songbird repertoires why so many? Pg 1126
- Ex. Foraging behavior feeding cost vs. feeding
benefits Pg. 1127
12Figure 51.5 The repertoire of a songbird
13Figure 51.6 Female warblers prefer males with
large song repertoires
14Figure 51.7 Feeding by young bluegill sunfish
15Learning
- Modification of behavior resulting from specific
experiences -
Alarm calls in Vervet monkeys Leopard loud
bark Eagle cough Snake -- chutter
16Maturation, Habituation, Imprinting
- Maturation ongoing developmental changes in
neuromuscular systems that affect behavior - Habituation simple type of learning that
involves a loss of responsiveness to stimuli that
convey little or no information - Imprinting learning that is limited to a
specific time period in an animals life and is
generally irreversible involves a sensitive
period - Ex. Geese following mother vs. a human
- Ex. Orphans being nonresponsive after abandoned
17Figure 51.9x Geese imprinting
18Figure 51.9 Imprinting Konrad Lorenz with
imprinted geese
19Figure 51.10 Two kinds of bird-song development
20Animals and stimulus associationcan learn to
associate stimuli
- Associative learning ability of many animals to
learn to associate one stimulus with another - Classical conditioning type of associative
learning associates an arbitrary stimulus with a
reward or punishment - Ex. Bell rings, dog salivates
- Operant conditioning trial and error learning
associates one of own behaviors with a reward or
punishment, and then tends to repeat or avoid
that behavior as appropriate
21Practice and exercise may explain the ultimate
basis of play
- Play has no apparent external goal, but involves
movements that ARE goal-directed - Ex. Stalking of conspecifics
- Play is potentially dangerous or costly
- Practice Hypothesis play is a type of learning
that allows animals to perfect behaviors needed
in functional circumstances
22Animal cognition
- What does an animals brain do with the
information it obtains about the outside world? - (see page 1133)
- Cognition ability of a animals nervous system
to perceive, store, process, and use info
gathered by sensory receptors. - Study of animal cognition is called cognitive
ethology
23Cognitive Mechanisms used during movement through
space.
- Kinesis simple change in activity or turning
rate in response to a stimulus - Ex. Sow bugs are more active in dry areas and
less active in humid ones this keeps them in
moist environments - Taxis a more less automatic, oriented movement
toward or away from some stimulus - Ex. Housefly larvae are negatively phototaxic
after feeding (are slower then, so keeps away
from predators)
24Landmarks, Cognitive Maps, Migration
- Use of Landmarks more complex cognitive
mechanism arbitrary stimulus that animal must
learn - Ex. Wasp and pinecones
- Ex. Honeybees and nectar supplies
- Cognitive Maps internal representation of the
spatial relationships among objects in an
animals surroundings - Ex. Jays stores food in caches, finds food
later, even bypasses food that wouldnt keep
25Figure 51.2 Niko Tinbergens experiments on the
digger wasps nest-locating behavior
Wasps were cued by the arrangement of the
landmarks not the physical objects themselves
26See pages 1135 and 1136.
- Migration behavior regular movement over
relatively long distances - Ex. Birds, whales, butterflies
- Use three mechanisms
- 1. piloting uses landmarks to navigate
- 2. orientation animal detects compass
directions and travels in straight-line path - 3. navigation determines its present location
relative to other locations AND detects compass
direction
27Social Behavior and Sociobiology
- Social behavior any kind of interaction between
two or more animals, usually of the same species. - Sociobiology applies evolutionary theory to the
study and interpretation of social behavior - Competition
- Agonistic Behavior contest involving
threatening and submissive behavior determines
who wins - Dominance Hierarchies
- Territoriality
- Courtship 1141-1142
28Mating Systems
- Promiscuous behavior no strong pair-bonds or
lasting relationships. - Monogamous relationships mates stay together
for one entire mating cycle (or even for a
lifetime) - Polygamous relationships individuals of one sex
mate with several of the other sex - -polygyny one male, many females
- -polyandry one female, many males
29Signals and Communication
- Signal behavior that causes a change in
behavior in another animal - Communication transmission of, reception of,
and response to signals - Pheremones chemical signals emitted for
communication purposes - Ex. Bees in hive
30Altruism
- Unselfish behavior when individuals behave in
ways that reduce their INDIVIDUAL behavior in
increase the fitness of the recipient of the
behavior - Ex. Alarm calls makes one individual more
obvious, but others can hide - Ex. Sterile workers in bee colony
- Reciprocal altruism behaving unselfishly toward
others who are not relatives (rare in all species
except humans) -
31Inclusive fitness
- Describes the total effect an individual has on
proliferating its genes by producing its own
offspring AND by providing aid that enables other
close relatives to increase the production of
their offspring - See page 1146 coefficient of relatedness
- Hamiltons Rule for natural selection to favor
an altruistic act, the benefit to the recipient
multiplied by the coefficient of relatedness must
exceed the cost to the altruist rBgtC - Kin selection favors this kind of
altruistic behavior by enhancing reproductive
success of relatives