Title: Introduction to Animal Behavior
1Introduction to Animal Behavior
2Warm Up
- Personification Putting human characteristics
onto animals to explain behavior - Youtube http//www.youtube.com/watch?vf-Kt_kuYVt
U
3Unit Map Follow Along in your packet
- WHAT ARE YOU LEARNING?
- Explain factors that serve to stimulate or
discourage various types of animal behavior. - Recognize the normality curve of animal behavior.
4Know Understand Do!
- Understand
- Stimuli influence on behavior
- How ethology has evolved
- Know
- Types of Behavior
- History of studying animal behavior
- Do
- Observe and interpret animal behaviors
- Evaluate animal studies
5Key Learning Animal Behavior
- Unit EQ How does animal behavior influence
animal husbandry?
Concept Influence Lesson EQ What can alter
behavior ? Vocab Agnostic
Concept History Lesson EQ How are animals
studied for behavior? Vocab FAP, Skinner Box
Concept Types Lesson EQ What are categories
of behavior? Vocab Stimuli, Behavior, Ethology
6What is Animal Behavior? The study of how and
why animals interact with each other (both within
and among species) and their environment.
Proximate questions - how mechanisms responsible
for interactions Ultimate questions - why how
these interactions influence an individual's
survival and reproduction.
7Some examples
Intraspecific interactions
mate choice
male competition
alarm calls
parental care
8Some examples
Interspecific interactions
predation
parasitism
mutualism
competition
9Some examples
Interactions with the environment
foraging
nest site selection
signal modification
10Why study behavior?
Possible first science Our survival dependent on
knowledge of other animals (prey/competitors/preda
tors).
Control/management of species Food and game
species, agricultural pests, invasive species,
endangered species.
Understanding/modification of our own behavior?
Studies of how birds learn and develop songs
provide unique insights into the development and
neural control of speech in humans.
11Curiosity. Science for sciences sake. Achieve
a better understanding of the species we share
the Earth with. Almost any behavior performed by
any animal may be interesting to study.
12History of the study of animal behavior
Paleolithic art from 40,000 years ago provide
indirect evidence that primitive humans observed
the behavior of animals. Cave paintings portray
herding animals in groups, animal migration,
certain predators hunting in packs, and solitary
animals alone.
13Blurton-Jones (1976) documented Kalahari
bushmens (!Kung) knowledge of animal
behavior Hunter-gatherer society, similar to
most of humans history.
- Discriminated data from theory - Developed
hypotheses - Used reasoned skepticism
14Introduction
- Why do animals do what they do?
- Why do birds sing?
- How do sea turtles navigate the ocean to lay
their eggs on the same beach where they were
hatched? - How do honeybees know when the hive needs more
food?
Image from http//www.nps.gov
Image from http//www.scottcamazine.com
15Introduction
- Animal behavior asks what, why, and how.
- Animal behavior is also referred to as ethology.
- Scientists who study animal behavior are called
ethologists.
Image from http//www.arcamax.com
16Introduction
- Animal behavior is centered around the ability to
move. - Animals seek food, water, shelter.
- Animals play with each other.
- Animals seek mates.
Image from http//www.e-magine.education.tas.gov.a
u
17Introduction
- In order for an animal to move, it uses muscles.
- So, in a way, we can think of animal behavior as
being dependent on muscle movement.
Image from http//www.wildaboutcats.org
18Introduction
- Behavior results as a reaction to a stimulus.
- A stimulus is a detectable change in the animals
internal or external environment. - Hunger.
- Sound.
- Pain.
- Visual cues.
- Hormonal changes.
Image from http//www3.nau.edu/biology/
19What is really happening
- Lets watch!
- As we watch, when the video pauses explain WHAT
the animal is doing and WHY you think the animal
is doing this - youtube. http//www.youtube.com/watch?vLU8DDYz68
kM
20Introduction
- Ethologists do not attempt to describe WHY an
animal does a behavior before describing WHAT the
animal is doing. - This removes as much bias as possible good
scientists dont want to just see what they
want to see. - Need to make objective observations of animal
behaviors, analyze the data statistically, then
come to conclusions about WHY an animal behaves a
certain way.
21Introduction
- For example, you see two gophers interacting with
each other, rolling and hopping around, running
to and from each other. - As a behavioral ecologist, you would first state
the behavior you are observing. - Once you made the observations about WHAT was
happening, you could begin to determine WHY they
are behaving that way.
22Introduction
- The behavior you observed could have been many
different things. - Play.
- Mating rituals.
- Aggression, defending territory.
23Movie Break!
- Please get a piece of paper and copy the
following - ANSWER FOR EACH ANIMAL PRESENTED
- 1. What animal?
- 2. Where is it commonly found?
- 3. What is the smart behavior?
- 4. Is this behavior (in your opinion)
instinctual, learned, or other? - AT THE END OF THE VIDEO
- What animal do YOU believe is the smartest and
why? (10 sentences)
24Video Worlds Smartest Animals
25Types of behaviors defined
26Pet Activity Warm Up On a separate sheet of
paper
- 1. Write the name of one of your pets. Is it a
bird, dog, or cat? Other? - 2. What behaviors do you think about when you
think of your pet? Give a list of behaviors.
Indicate if the behavior was genetic innate or
learned.
27Behavioral Ecology
- Behavioral ecology emphasizes evolutionary
hypothesis science as a process - Based on expectation that animals behave in ways
that will increase their Darwinian fitness
(reproductive success)
28Stimuli Review
- Certain stimuli trigger innate behaviors called
fixed action patterns - A fixed action pattern (FAP) is a highly
stereotypical, innate behavior that continues to
completion after initiation by an external
stimulus
29Learning
- Learning is experience based modification of
behavior - Some learning is due mostly to inherent
maturation - Habituation is learning involving loss of
sensitivity to unimportant stimuli - Associative learning involves linking one
stimulus with another
30Classical conditioning (Pavlov)
31Operant conditioning (Skinner)
32Operant Conditioning ?? Animal learns to behave
in a certain way through repeated practice ??
Trial error learning animal tests conditions
for desired response e.g. Skinner box ?? Animal
learns that a behavior gets a certain response ??
e.g. rat presses lever, gets food
33Rhythmic Behaviors
- Rhythmic behaviors synchronize an animals
activities with daily and seasonal changes in the
environment - Governed by endogenous clocks, which in turn
require exogenous cues to keep the behavior
properly timed with the external environment
34Foraging Behavior
- Ecologists are using cost/benefit analysis to
study foraging behavior - Species may be generalists or specialists as
foragers - Animals modify behavior to favor a high ratio of
energy intake to expenditure
35Social Behavior
- Sociobiology places social behavior in
evolutionary context
36Competitive Social Behaviors
- Agonistic behavior competitor gains advantage by
getting a limited resource like food or a mate - Natural selection survival of the fittest
- Pecking order dominance hierarchies with
differently ranked individuals permitted options
according to their status
37How natural selections leads to behavioral traits
- Variation exists fraction of the species T.
elegans (garter snakes) had ability to recognize
slugs by chemoreception - Increased fitness That variation has higher
chance to survive and reproduce (genes passed on) - Led to changes in the population over time
38Mating Behavior
- Promiscuity having many random mates
- Monogamy having only one mate
- Polygamy having a few, selected mates
39Mating behavior
Promiscuous
Strong bonds
Monogamous (sex morphology similar)
Polygamous
Polyandry (dimorphic Larger, Showy males)
Polygyny (dimorphic Larger, Showy females)
- Factors influencing evolution of mating systems
- Need of young
- Paternity certainty
- certainty increases with external fertilization
40Sexual selection
- Sexual selection (selective pressure) ? evolution
of male behavior and anatomy - Stalked-eyed flies
- Females more likely to mate with males with
longer eyestalks - Why? Correlation between genetic disorders and
inability to develop long eyestalks
41Social Interactions
- Social interactions depend on diverse modes of
communication - Some animals communicate with smells
- Honeybees communicate through dancing
42Social learning
- Experience involves observing others
- Culture information transfer through social
learning - Vervet monkey alarm calls
- Memes (Richard Dawkins)
43Altruistic Behavior
- Inclusive fitness accounts for most altruistic
behavior - Best explained by a kin theory, animals try to
maintain the survival of others who share their
genes
44Altruism
- Cost/benefit of selfish vs. unselfish behavior?
- Altruism reduces individual fitness but increases
fitness of others
45Reciprocal altruism
- Some animals behave altruistically toward others
who are not relatives. A wolf may offer food to
another wolf even though they share no kinship. - Such behavior can be adaptive if the aided
individual returns the favor in the future. - This sort of exchange of aid is called reciprocal
altruism. - Commonly used to explain altruism in humans.
46Agonistic behavior
- Ritualized
- Winner gains access to resources
- Physical and behavioral characteristics involved
- Usually harm is not done
47Reasoning
- Analyze problem devise solution using past
experiences - Most Dogs?
- E.g. No, cant unwind leash from tree
- Most Horses?
- No
- Primates?
- YES!
48Sociobiology
- Human sociobiology connects biology to the
humanities and social sciences
49Sociobiology (E.O. Wilson)
- Connects human culture to evolutionary theory
- Social behaviors exist because they are
perpetuated by natural selection - Does not mean all social behaviors are hardwired
(nature vs. nurture)
50Self-quiz
- Bees can see colors we cannot see and detect
minute amounts of chemicals we cannot smell. But
unlike many insects, bees cannot hear very well.
Which of the following statements best fits into
the perspective of behavioral ecology?
51Possible answers
- A. Bees are too small to have functional ears.
- B. Hearing must not contribute much to a bees
fitness. - C. If a bee could hear, its tiny brain would be
swamped with information.
52Possible answers
- D. This is an example of a fixed action pattern
- E. If bees could hear, the noise of the hive
would distract the bees from their work
53Challenge question
- Starting with the very first time a bee leaves
the hive, it always flies in a circle around the
hive before heading out on a foraging trip. - If it is prevented from seeing the hive when it
leaves or if the hive is moved while the bee is
gone, the bee is not able to locate the hive when
it returns.
54Challenge Question
- For this reason, beekeepers know that a hive
should only be moved .when? Why? - What part of the bees orientation flight
behavior appears to be innate? - What component shows learning?
55Temple Grandin
- Who is she?
- What is her disability?
- What was her major break through at her Aunts
cattle farm? - How does this break through help Temple through
college? - What problems arise at college with her break
through? - How does she over come these problems?
- What does Temple realize when she first visits
the feed lot? - How does she go about her research?
- Why is her job at the newspaper critical for
Temple? - What does Temple design for the gentleman who
comes to the paper? - What happens the 1st time they use her design?
- Why does this happen?
- How does Temple plan on fixing the industry?
- What break through does Temple have at the
funeral? - What break through does Temple have at the
grocery store? How does this play a role in her
slaughter house design? - What does Temple do at the conference?
- How does her disability help her see?
56 Behavioral biologists study the actions of
animals in their natural environments
- Behavioral biology is the study of what animals
do when interacting with their environment - Behavior can be interpreted in terms of proximate
causes (immediate interaction with the
environment) or ultimate causes (evolutionary
differences)
57- Early insights into the nature of behavior came
from studies by Nobel laureates Karl von Frisch,
Konrad Lorenz, and Niko Tinbergen - They were among the first experimentalists in
behavioral biology
- Tinbergen and Lorenz performed experimental
studies of innate behavior and simple forms of
learning
58- Behavioral ecologists are especially interested
in the ultimate causes of behavior, which are
evolutionary ? Natural selection preserves
behaviors that enhance fitness
59Niko Tinbergen
- Niko Tibergen was a pioneer in the field of
animal behavior. - He observed animals in their natural conditions,
then manipulated, or varied the conditions to see
how the animals responded.
Image from http//nobelprize.org/
60- A classic Tinbergen experiment deals with the
nesting behavior of the digger wasp
- The female wasp often excavates and cares for
four or five separate nests - Tinbergen used this experiment to test his
prediction that digger wasps use landmarks to
keep track of the location of their nests
61Niko Tinbergen
- Tinbergen observed how a wasp called the beewolf
finds its nest among other beewolf nests. - He observed that the beewolf would circle its
nest in an ever-widening circle before flying
away to hunt. - This behavior was an action pattern it was
performed exactly the same way each time.
Image from http//www.sciencenews.org
62Niko Tinbergen
- After the beewolf flew off, Tinbergen would move
certain landmarks around the nests. - When the beewolf returned, it was disoriented.
- So, by manipulating the beewolfs environment,
Tinbergen came to the conclusion that the beewolf
commits landmarks to memory to be able to find
its nest when it comes back from hunting!
Image from http//www.earthlife.org
63- In the experiment, Tinbergen placed a circle of
pinecones around a nest opening
Nest
1
Figure 37.1, Part 1
64- After the female flew away, Tinbergen moved the
pinecones a few feet to one side of the nest
opening
- When the female wasp returned, she flew to the
middle of the circle of pinecones rather than to
the actual nest opening
No Nest
Nest
2
Figure 37.1, Part 2
65- Tinbergen next arranged the pinecones in a
triangle around the nest and made a circle of
small stones off to one side of the nest opening
- This time the wasp flew to the stones
Nest
No Nest
3
Figure 37.1, Part 3
66- The wasp cued in on the arrangement of the
landmarks rather than the landmarks themselves
- This experiment demonstrated that the wasp did
use landmarks and that she could learn new ones
to keep track of her nest
67Niko Tinbergen
- Tinbergen had to describe and investigate WHAT
the organism was doing before attempting to
explain WHY.
68Spatial learning and cognitive maps
- Spatial learning (Tinbergen) experience consists
of spatial structures of the environment - Use of landmarks. Reliable?
- Cognitive maps Internal representation of
spatial relationships
69Recap
- What?
- What was the experiment?
- Where?
- Where did it take place?
- When?
- When was the behavior altered?
- Why
- Why was this a break through in the study of
animal behavior? - How?
- How would this discovery impact (for example) a
bee keeper?
70Guidelines For Studying Animal Behavior
- Ask clear, specific questions.
- Keep the question simple. Are you sure it is a
question that can be easily answered? - Put the question into the, What is the effect of
_______ on ________? model. - Formulate a complete hypothesis.
- Decide on the type of data you need to collect
and how you will gather the data. - Leave time to run statistical analyses on the
data, and form conclusions based on your results.
71Check your understanding
- Draw a cartoon of the Niko Wasp Experiment
72Animal Behavior
7337.2 Behavior results from both genes and
environmental factors
- Animal behavior often involves a combination of
genetic programming (innate behavior) and
environmental experiences (learning) - ?both genes and the environment influence the
development of behavioral phenotypes- just like
any other traits
74What influences behavior?
- Environmental pressures.
- Internal influences such as hormones.
- Learning.
- Genetic predisposition (sometimes referred to as
instinct). - There isnt a definite combination of these
influences that affects all behavior.
75Proximate vs. Ultimate Causes
- The question of WHY can have different answers.
- Proximate causes are related to internal changes
in the animal. - Hormones.
- Messages from the nervous system.
- Proximate means close.
- Ultimate causes are related to the survival and
reproductive success of the animal. - Ultimate means furthest, or utmost.
76- The gathering of nest materials by lovebirds has
genetic and environmental components
Single long strip carried in beak(Fischers
lovebird)
Several short strips tucked under
feathers(peach-faced lovebird)
Tuckingfailure
Strip inbeak
Hybrid behavior
Figure 37.2
77Proximate vs. Ultimate Causes
- An example incorporating both proximate and
ultimate causes Beldings ground squirrels. - When males reach about two months old, they leave
the burrow where they were born. - It is an increase in testosterone, or a hormonal
change that triggers this behavior. - So, the proximate cause of the nest-leaving
behavior involves the increase in testosterone
levels in the squirrel.
78Proximate vs. Ultimate Causes
- There is more to the story than just hormones!
- When males leave the nest, they avoid inbreeding
with sisters or cousins, etc. - Their offspring are therefore healthier.
- The male offspring inherit the same genetic
information that induces them to leave their
nests at a young age. - So, this behavior is passed on genetically, and
it makes for a healthier population of squirrels. - Avoiding inbreeding is therefore the ultimate
cause of this early nest-leaving behavior.
79How to determine WHY action patterns.
- Action patterns are complex behaviors that are
always repeated the same way by a species of
animal. - We say that action patterns are stereotyped,
since they occur the same way each time, and
through to completion. - After repeatedly observing action patterns, an
ethologist can analyze the data statistically. - Only then do we attempt to determine WHY a
behavior is being done.
8037.3 Innate behavior often appears as fixed
action patterns
- Sign stimuli (often a simple cue in an animals
environment) trigger innate, essentially
unchangeable fixed action patterns (FAPs) - The genetic programming underlying FAPs ensures
that such activities are performed correctly
without practice
81Fixed action pattern (FAP)
- Sequence of unlearned behaviors
- Nearly unchangeable
- Carried out to completion
- Sign stimulus (releaser) ? behavior
- Example of an innate behavior
82More on Action Patterns
- The egg-rolling behavior of the greylag goose is
a good example of an action pattern. - Niko Tibergen and another pioneer in ethology,
Konrad Lorentz, originally observed this behavior.
Image from http//www.grayimages.co.uk
83More on Action Patterns
- The goose will roll an egg that is outside the
nest back into the nest in the same manner every
time. - Interestingly, the goose will do this with any
round object placed outside the nest! - Every time this action pattern is initiated, it
is carried through to completion.
84- The graylag goose always retrieves an egg that
has been bumped out of her nest in the same manner
- This is a fixed action pattern
- She carries this sequence to completion, even if
the egg slips away during the process
Figure 37.3A
85- Several key events in the life cycle of the
European cuckoo are determined by fixed action
patterns
1
2
3
Figure 37.3B
86- The behavior of the cuckoo hatchling ejecting the
host eggs from the nest
- The feeding behavior of a foster mother to the
cuckoo chick
Figure 37.3B
87Learning ranges from simple behavioral changes to
complex problem solving
- Learning is a change in behavior resulting from
experience - Habituation is one of the simplest forms of
learning - An animal learns not to respond to a repeated
stimulus that conveys little or no information - For example, birds eventually become habituated
to scarecrows and no longer avoid nearby fruit
trees
88Table 37.4
89Imprinting is learning that involves both innate
behavior and experience
- Imprinting is irreversible learning limited to a
sensitive period in an animal's life it enhances
fitness by enabling rapid learning - Example Lorenz used the graylag goose to
demonstrate imprinting. He took over the
maternal role for a group of goslings
90- Not all examples of imprinting involve
parent-offspring bonding
- Although newly hatched salmon do not receive any
parental care, they imprint on the complex
mixture of odors unique to the freshwater stream
where they hatch - This allows salmon to find their way back to the
stream to spawn after spending a year or more at
sea
91- Imprinting plays an important role in song
development for many kinds of birds
Figure 37.5B
92Many animals learn by association and imitation
- Associative learning is learning that a
particular stimulus or response is linked to a
reward or punishment - These ducks have learned to associate humans
with food handouts - They congregate rapidly whenever a person
approaches the shoreline
Figure 37.6A
93- Trial-and-error learning is a common form of
associative learning
- An animal learns to associate one of its own
behavioral acts with a positive or negative effect
Figure 37.6B
94- Imitation is learning by observing and mimicking
the behavior of others
- This form of learning is not limited to a
sensitive period - Many predators, including cats and coyotes, seem
to learn some of their basic hunting tactics by
observing and imitating their mother
95Animal cognition includes problem-solving behavior
- Some animals exhibit problem-solving behavior
- Examples chimpanzees and ravens
Figure 37.7A, B
96Animal Behavior
- ECOLOGICAL ROLES OF BEHAVIOR
9737.8 An animal's behavior reflects its evolution
- Behavior is an evolutionary adaptation that
enhances survival and reproductive success - Behavior evolves as natural selection fine-tunes
an animal to its environment - The hunting and reproduction behaviors of jaguars
- Nest location by digger wasps
- Imprinting of goslings
9837.9 Biological rhythms synchronize behavior
with the environment
- Animals exhibit a great variety of rhythmic
behavior patterns - Circadian rhythms are patterns that are repeated
daily - Sleep/wake cycles in animals and plants
- Circadian rhythms appear to be timed by an
internal biological clock
99- In the absence of environmental cues, these
rhythms continue
- But they become out of phase with the environment
Constant darkness
1212 (natural)
Figure 37.9A
10037.10 Animal movement may be oriented to stimuli
or landmarks
- Movement in a directed way enables animals to
- avoid predators
- migrate to a more favorable environment
- obtain food
- find mates and nest sites
101TYPES of ANIMAL MOVEMENT
- kinesis- simplest type of animal movement -
random movement in response to a stimulus - taxis- another simple type
- A more or less automatic movement directed toward
or away from some stimulus - Examples include rheotaxis (current) chemotaxis,
and phototaxis - Some animals use landmarks to find their way
within an area
102Directed movements
- Strong genetic influence
- Kinesis versus taxis
- Migration
- Migrating blackcaps kept in captivity exhibited
behaviors of migratory restlessness at night - Migratory and nonmigratory blackcaps mated and
subjected to both environments - 40 of offspring exhibited migratory
restlessness
10337.11 Movement from place to place often depends
on internal maps
- Many animals formulate cognitive maps
- Internal representations of spatial relationships
among objects in their surroundings (wasp
example) - Some animals undertake long-range migrations
- Examples whales, sea turtles, birds, monarch
butterflies - Animals navigate using the sun, stars,
temperature gradients, landmarks, or Earth's
magnetism
104- Migrating gray whales use coastal landmarks to
stay on course
Arctic Ocean
FEEDINGGROUNDS
Siberia
Alaska
NORTHAMERICA
PacificOcean
AtlanticOcean
Baja California
BREEDING GROUNDS
Figure 37.11A
105- The indigo bunting learns a star map and
navigates by fixing on the North Star
Paper
Funnel-shapedcage
Ink pad
Figure 37.11B
106Lets Read More About It
- Read the article on Indigo Buntings
- Answer the questions that follow
- Put the experiment into the, What is the effect
of _______ on ________? model. - Formulate a complete hypothesis in the IF/THAN
format - What is the type of data collected?
- How is the data gathered?
- What is the timing for the experiment ? (How long
did they run?) - What are the results?
- How can this influence studies of other migratory
birds? - How can human behavior alter this natural
behavior in birds?
107Bird Migration Video
- For each bird
- What is the species?
- How far does it travel?
- Try to get an idea of where 2 birds mentioned in
the video are from. - Afterwards we will try to locate possible modes
of remembrance during migration. - Landmarks? Stars? Earths Magnetism? Other?
10837.12 Behavioral ecologists use cost/benefit
analysis in studying feeding behavior
- Animals are generally selective and efficient in
their food choices - Some animals, such as gulls, are feeding
generalists - Other animals, such as koalas, are feeding
specialists
Figure 37.12A, B
109- The mechanism that enables an animal to find
particular foods efficiently is called a search
image
- Natural selection seems to have shaped feeding
behavior to maximize energy gain and minimize the
expenditure of time and energy - This is the theory of optimal foraging
110Foraging behavior
- Optimal foraging theory behaviors exist as a
compromise between benefits of nutrition and cost
of obtaining food - Predation must be a factor
111- Whenever an animal has food choices, there are a
number of tradeoffs
- A bass can get more usable energy from minnows,
but crayfish are easier to catch - However, it may take more time to eat a crayfish
because of its tough exoskeleton
Figure 37.12C
112- The kangaroo rat selects high-energy foods
(seeds) in a manner that reduces time spent above
the ground, where it is exposed to predators
Figure 37.12E
113Read more about it!
- Read the Indigo Bunting and answer the following
- Put the experiment into the, What is the effect
of _______ on ________? model. - Formulate a complete hypothesis in the IF/THAN
format - What is the type of data collected?
- How is the data gathered?
- What is the timing for the experiment ? (How long
did they run?) - How many trials were needed?
- What are the results?
- How can this influence the feed industry for
cattle?
114Animal Behavior
- SOCIAL BEHAVIOR AND SOCIOBIOLOGY
11537.13 Sociobiology places social behavior in an
evolutionary context
- Social behavior is defined as the interaction
among members of a population - The discipline of sociobiology studies social
behavior in the context of evolution
11637.14 Rituals involving agonistic behavior often
resolve confrontations between competitors
- Agonistic behavior is social behavior consisting
of threats and combat that settles disputes
between individuals in a population - Agonistic behavior can directly affect an
individual's evolutionary fitness - The victor often gains first or exclusive access
to mates
Figure 37.14
11737.15 Dominance hierarchies are maintained by
agonistic behavior
- Many animals live in social groups maintained by
agonistic behaviors - Dominance hierarchy is the ranking of individuals
based on social interactions
118- Chickens establish a peck order
- Resources are often partitioned based upon the
dominance hierarchy
Figure 37.15
11937.17 Territorial behavior parcels space and
resources
- Humans tend to space themselves out when they are
close to others - They establish what we might call personal
territories
Figure 37.17A
120- Many animals exhibit territorial behavior
- It is a form of social behavior that partitions
resources
121- A territory is an area that individuals defend
and from which other members of the same species
are usually excluded
- The size of the territory varies with species,
the function, and the available resources - Territories are typically used for feeding,
mating, and/or rearing young
122- Territoriality is often maintained by agonistic
behavior
- These New Zealand gannets maintain their
individual nesting territories by calling and
pecking at each other
Figure 37.17B
123- Territoriality can enhance fitness if the
benefits of possessing a territory outweigh the
energy costs of defending one
124- Territorial rights are proclaimed continually in
a variety of ways
- Bird songs
- Noises, such as the bellowing of sea lions and
the chattering of squirrels - Defecation in open areas
- Scent markers, such as urine
Figure 37.17C
125Signals and communication
- Signal causes change in another organisms
behavior - Difference between communication and language
- Pheromones (reproductive and nonreproductive
behaviors)
126Auditory communication
- Songs of birds are partly learned
- Critical period
- Some insects, such as male Drosophila, produce a
song even when reared in isolation - Very little variation, why?
127Zebra Danio Experiment
- Read the Article and Answer the following
- Put the experiment into the, What is the effect
of _______ on ________? model. - Formulate a complete hypothesis in the IF/THAN
format - What is the type of data collected?
- How is the data gathered?
- What is the timing for the experiment ? (How long
did they run?) - How many trials were needed?
- What are the results?
- How could this influence the sale of multiple
Danio fish to someone in a pet store?
128Animal Behavior REVIEW
- Define ethology, animal behavior, stimulus,
action pattern, proximate cause (give example),
ultimate cause (give example), FAP (give
example), agnostic behavior, rhythmic behavior,
Circadian Rhythm - Answer in complete sentences
- What influences behavior?
- Know the types of behavior and be able to
explain/give examples of each! - What are the 5 types of learning?
- Explain Nikos experiment (you can use drawings
for support) What did this tell us about animal
behavior? - Explain the indigo bunting experiment. What did
this tell us about animal behavior? - What was the Skinner box? What type of behavior
does this illustrate? - What was Pavlovs experiment and what type of
behavior does this illustrate? Why was this an
important gain in animal behavior? - Give the theory of optimal foraging in a
mathematical equation using words instead of
numbers - What are the types of movement and how are they
influenced?