Title: Behavior Development b
1Behavior Development b
2Learning
- Learning is a change in an animals behavior
linked to a particular experience it has - Brain properties change by gene and environmental
interactions
3Learning
- Forms of learning
- Imprinting
- Specialized learning
- Variation in learning behavior
- Environmental influences
4Imprinting
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v7OynlzqtxmY
- Why would this behavior be adaptive?
5Imprinting
- Occurs when a young animals early social
interactions lead to learning - Functions
- Recognition of parents in animals with preccocial
young (ex geese) - Recognition of an appropriate sexual partner
- Dependence of recognition on recognition
- Young animal must see model to recognize it
- Learning is flexible- model does not need to look
like parent or even same species
6Konrad Lorenz
- Imprinting in Greylag Geese
- Imprint on humans
- Later preferred Humans as mates
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v2UIU9XH-mUI
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vSK65euK1FGU
7Great Tits Blue Tits
Imprinting has different effects among species
8Imprinting has Different Effects Among Species
- When cross imprinted
- Some individuals became imprinted on opposite
species - None of the Great Tits mated with a member of
its own species - Formed a mate preference based on imprinted
foster parent - Most of Blue Tits mated within its own species
- Exhibited a different developmental interaction
9Specialized Learning
- Memory formation to aid in finding food
10Clarks Nutcracker
11Clarks Nutcracker
- Whack cones of Whitebark pine
- Also eats limber pine seeds
- Seed pouch under tongue
- Distribute seeds in Caches
- Cache more than they will retrieve
- Hides up to 38,000 of seeds per season
- Up to 5,000 separate caches
- Up to 20 miles away
- Buries seeds in fall downslope
- In winter will retrieve
12Clarks Nutcracker
13Clarks Nutcracker
- Nutcrackers able to relocate caches with up to
80 accuracy - Recall memory for months
- Use landmarks to relocate caches
14Nutcracker torture!
15White Bark Pine
16Seeds germinate in clusters
Un-retrieved caches create new stands
17Learning varies among members of the same species
- Chickadees in Alaska require fewer inspections to
locate food stores that the same species in
Colorado - What causes variation among individuals?
18Factors that Influence the Development of Learned
Behavior
19Environmental Differences
- Individuals can learn based on their interactions
as young - Interactions with siblings can shape behavior
- Kin recognition
- Used to identify closely related individuals from
potential rivals - Cues such as olfaction sight can be used as
recognition cues
20Polistes Paper Wasps
- Paper wasps use both olfactory cues to recognize
individuals from the same nest - Females are also able to recognize facial
markings - Individuals with altered face markings were
attacked more frequently
21Beldings Ground Squirrels
22Beldings Ground Squirrels
23Beldings Ground Squirrels
- Lives in subalpine and alpine communities
- Meadows
- Social ground squirrel
- Females remain, males disperse
- Closely related females help raise and protect
each others offspring - Prey species lifestyle
- Aerial predators such as hawks
- Ground predators such as weasels
- Colonial living aids in protection
24Kin Recognition
- Kin recognition critical
- Helps identify closely related for assistance
- Ability to recognize intruders
- Prevents inbreeding
- Strong selection pressure favoring genes that
code for recognition behaviors
25Kin Recognition
- Signals used to identify kin include
- Scent
- Appearance
26Ground Squirrel Musical Chairs
- Newborn Ground squirrels were moved from their
nests into 4 groups - Siblings reared apart
- Siblings reared together
- Non-siblings raised apart
- Non-siblings raised together
27Beldings Ground Squirrel Torture!
- After raised in their respective groups ground
squirrels were placed in an arena to test their
ability to recognize each other - Recognition was measure using levels of
aggression - Aggression indicates less kin recognition
28What would you predict?
- Siblings reared apart
- Siblings reared together
- Non-siblings raised apart
- Non-siblings raised together
29Individuals learn based on their olfactory
interactions as young
- Ground squirrels raised together learned each
others smell and were less aggressive towards
each other - Independent of whether they were siblings
- Ground squirrels raised separately tended to be
more aggressive toward each other
30Have we met?
- Biological sisters raised apart had fewer
aggressive interactions than nonsiblings raised
apart - Indicates siblings have a secondary learned
behavior for recognizing kin
31Kin Discrimination
32Why are Females more Discriminating in their
Sense of Smell?
33Armpit Effect
- Animals have ability to recognize relatives they
have never met before - Individuals can learn their own olfactory profile
- Self recognition provides a reference to compare
other individuals smells to - Individuals who smell similar are more closely
related, whereas individuals that smell less
similar are less closely related
34Chemical Communication
- Oral and dorsal glands
- Nasal investigation
- Scent mark behavior
- 5 odors that are individually distinct
35Scent Discrimination
- Individuals learn to recognize their own scent
- Spend more time sniffing less closely related
relatives
36Ultimate Causation
- Kin Recognition by using scent discrimination
allows Beldings ground squirrels in order to - Helps identify closely related for assistance
- Ability to recognize intruders
- Prevents inbreeding
37Genetic Differences
- Some behavioral phenotypes can be determined by a
genetic component - Alleles that code for behavioral differences can
be selected for or against by natural selection
to maximize fitness -
38Western Terrestrial Garter SnakeThamnophis
elegans
39Western Terrestrial Garter SnakeThamnophis
elegans
- Highly variable in habitat
- Can be found near water or away from water
- Feeds on a wide array of food sources
- Slugs, worms, leeches, tadpoles, frogs, fish,
insects, lizards, small birds
40Western Terrestrial Garter Snake Populations
- Coastal and inland snake populations exhibit
variation in their diet preference - Inland population
- Lives in arid habitats near lakes and streams
- Feed primarily on fish and frogs
- Coastal populations
- Lives in moist coast ranges
- Feed primarily on banana slugs
Is variation in prey preference genetic?
41Garter Snake Prey Preference Experiment
- Pregnant snakes from both coastal and inland
populations were brought into lab - Immediately after birth offspring were isolated
- Controlling for environmental learning influences
- After several days each snake offspring was
offered a segment of Banana slug - http//www.youtube.com/watch?v92InYz1cU2o
42Garter Snake populations exhibit Prey Preference
- Feeding score indicates how many days a snake ate
the offered slug - A score of 10 indicates slug was eaten every
offering - Coastal slugs exhibited greater likelihood of
eating slug than inland garter
43Garter Snake populations exhibit Prey Preference
44- What happens if Garter snakes are offered
multiple prey options?
45The Tadpole vs Slug Taste Test
- Newborn garter snakes are offered cotton swabs
with different prey juice - Snakes were offered swab for 1 minute
- Preference was measured by number of tongue
flicks -
What?
46Tongue Flicking in Snakes
- Tongue flicking is a sensory-gathering behavior
- Olfaction
- Tongue flicks are used during prey trailing,
foraging, mate searching - Chemical molecules gathered by the tongue are
delivered to the Vomeronasal organ on roof of
mouth
47Tongue Flicking in Snakes
- Ability to triangulate chemical cues in the
environment is maximized by - Waving tongue in the air to detect vertical
gradients - Forked tongue increases sensitivity to chemical
gradients in the environment - Tongue flicking rate
http//vimeo.com/1206868
48Vomeronasal Organ
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vyzC8DZK0aT4
49The Tadpole vs Slug Taste Test
- There was no difference in preference to toad
tadpole samples - i.e. Both populations had about the same number
of tongue flicks to the tadpole covered cotton
swab - Coastal garter snakes showed higher preference to
slug samples - i.e. Coastal population had a significantly
higher number of tongue flicks to the slug
covered cotton swab - Genetic crosses of both populations indicated
that this prey preference was being driven by a
variation in alleles
50How Could Prey Preference Variation Occurred?
- Remember the bell shaped curve?
- A rare slug feeding allele could have become more
prevalent in the coastal population - Hypothesis- Garter snakes with rare slug eating
allele were able to gain a fitness advantage
because they could acquire more energy from
eating a slug than a snake eating a tadpole
Selection Pressure
51Genetic Differences
- Genetic differences in behavior are hard to
understand because most phenotypes are polygenic - Polygenic Inheritance means multiple genes effect
1 characteristic - Ex. Skin pigmentation
- But sometimes a single gene can effect a behavior
52Single Gene Effect on Behavior Development
- When a single gene effects a behavior scientists
can manipulate the gene to test the effects of
genes on behavior - Inactivate the gene
- Knockout experiments
- Aids in understanding the role of genes on the
development
53Knockout Experiments
- Laboratory mice
- fosB genes
- Codes for proteins involved in gene transcription
- If fosB gene is inactivated transcription can not
occur - Scientists artificially alter the code of the
fosB gene
54Knockout Experiments
- fosB genes involved in influencing maternal
behavior - Females with active fosB genes tends to offspring
- Females with inactivated fosB genes does not tend
offspring
Ultimate causation?? How would a natural mutation
effect mice?
55Developmental Homeostasis
- The capacity of developmental mechanisms within
individuals to produce adaptive traits, despite
potentially disruptive effects of mutant genes
and suboptimal environmental conditions - Behavioral development is redundant
- There is a back-up plan
- Allows animals to adapt and develop normally when
they face unusual environments
56Developmental Homeostasis Mediates Suboptimal
Environments
- Beldings ground squirrels
- Baby squirrels were raised in isolation
- No environmental sensory input
- When hear audio recording of alarm call react
normally - Stop behavior and look around
- Illustrates that there is redundancy in
development of behavior
57Developmental Homeostasis Mediates Effects of
Mutations
- Developmental homeostasis helps counteract
deleterious mutations - Use of a back-up plan
- Mutations thought to contribute to asymmetry in
body development - Developmental homeostasis aids individuals in
developing symmetrical bodies despite mutations
58Why is Symmetry so Important?
- Symmetry is thought to be a signal of mate
quality - In many species, symmetrical individuals are
mated with more frequently than non-symmetrical
males - Symmetry is adaptive!!
59Adaptive Value of Learning
- Modification of behavior based on experience
- Behavior modified to maximize fitness
- Behavior modification and its mechanisms are
costly
60Cost- Benefit Analysis of Behavior
- Benefit of a behavior has to outweigh the cost
- Discriminating behavior in mate selection
behavior of Thinnine wasps - http//www.youtube.com/watch?v0nfgibIYbg8
61Cost- Benefit Analysis
- Male invests lots of energy in process of
mating with orchid - Potentially loses mating opportunities
- Males change behavior by remembering locations of
orchids and avoiding scents from those locations - Cost of processing stimulus
- Cost of storing memory (develop brain)
- The benefit of learning behavior is that male
increases his efficiency at finding females - Benefit in reproductive potential outweighs cost
of learning behavior
62Sex Differences in Learning Behavior
- Males and females may vary in their ecological
pattern - Variations can lead to different cost-benefit
analysis formulas between sexes
63Vole Ecology
- Polygynous Meadow vole
- Males have multiple mates
- Male territory has to encompass all female
territories - Male territory 4X size that of female
- Consequence- male has to be able to navigate
greater area than female - Monogamous Prairie vole
- Male and female live together
- Male and female have same size territory
- Consequence- males and females navigate same area
64Vole Torture
- Meadow voles (polygynous)
- Males made fewer errors than females
- Suggests males learn more readily
- Prairie voles (monogamous)
- Males and females had no significant difference
in error rates - Suggests males and females learn equally
65Cost-Benefit Analysis
- Recall learning behavior is costly
- Behavior modification and its mechanisms are
costly - Requires genes, gene expression, brain power
66Mammalian Hippocampus
- Long term memory
- Spatial relationships like navigation
- What would you expect when comparing hippocampus
size in male and female meadow voles?
67Vole Hippocampus
- Male meadow voles have larger hippocampus than
the female - Pine voles (monogamous)
- Male and female similar sized hippocampus
68Not so fast!
- Brown Headed Cowbird Interspecific Brood Parasite
69Reproduction Requires Lots of Energy
(reproductive effort)
- Save energy by eliminating parental care
- Allows more energy for creating additional
gametes for further reproductive events. - More reproductive events higher fitness
- Cowbirds produce 30-40 eggs per season
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v9O7Ruzaxgvoplaynex
t1listPL807E25E0A3A38593
70Dont Put All of Your Eggs in One Basket!
- Reduces risk of predation by having many nesting
sites - Predators include mice, ground squirrels, weasel,
badgers, deer, and hawks - Increase fitness by targeting multiple nests
- Parasitizes smaller birds
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vprvz7a5IBaYfeature
related
71Female Cowbird Ecology
- Female must find host nest
- Female monitors nest to lay eggs when host is
laying eggs - Must remember location to return
- Female lays up 40 eggs- must be able to locate
sufficient number of nests - Female needs high spatial processing abilities
72Male Cowbird Ecology
- Males do not need high spatial processing
abilities - Males do not need to find nests
- Males spatial processing limited to finding mates
and food
73Sex Differences in Learning Behavior-Variation
in male and female ecology result in different
cost-benefit analysis formulas between sexes
- Female Cowbirds exhibit larger hippocampus volume
74Operant Conditioning
- A type of learning based on trial and error, in
which an action, becomes more frequently
performed if rewarded - Involves an operant (a voluntary action) and
consequence that comes from that action
75Skinner Box
- B.F.Skinner, psychologist
- Lever is accidentally pressed as rat explores box
- Food is dispensed
- Positive reinforcement will increase frequency of
behavior
76Negative Reinforcement
- Novel taste followed by nausea results in
avoidance of food source - Adaptive behavior for avoiding toxic foods
77(No Transcript)
78Sources
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vJbKXNjbgvqc
- http//www.birdsamore.com/videos/snake-eatingslug.
htm