Title: Animal Behavior
1Animal Behavior
Male Jumping Spider (Habronattus icenoglei)
2Definition
- Behavior is the response of an animal to
environmental stimuli. - The study of behavior is called ethology.
Ethologists are interested both in proximal and
ultimate reasons for behaviors.
3Ethology
Evolution
Psychology
Ecology
Behavior
Genetics
Physiology
4Behavior and genetics
- Innate behavior Stereotyped behaviors that are
based on preset neural pathways and are evoked by
a key stimulus.
Learned behavior a behavior the animal has
developed based on its experience with a
particular stimulus.
5Behavior, Ecology, and Evolution
- Behavioral ecology is the study of the adaptive
values of certain behaviors. - Are all behaviors adaptive?
- How is a particular behavior adaptive?
- Since behaviors affect fitness and often have a
genetic component, behaviors can evolve.
6Types of behaviors
- Migratory behavior
- Territorial behavior
- Animal cognition
- Animal communication
- Reproductive behavior
- Social behavior
- Foraging behavior
7Migratory Behavior
- Migration long, two-way movements of animals,
usually seasonal - Migration often involves precise migration
patterns and highly specific destinations.
In some animals, these behaviors are purely
innate in others, there appears to be some
learning involved.
8Territorial Behavior
- Any behavior designed to maintain an animals
exclusive use of a an area. - Territorial behavior is costly.
- Energy costs
- Increased visibility to predators
- Increased risk of injury in encounters with
competitors
- So why be territorial?
- Increased food availability or foraging area
- Exclusive access to mates (increased
reproductive success) - Access to refuges from predators
9Animal Cognition
- Question Do animals think?
- thinking includes problem-solving, planning,
deception, and specific vocabulary - Problem-solving is done by chimpanzees (and other
primates) and some birds (corvids and others)
Planning is also used by various primates and
corvids Deception and predator-specific
vocabulary are thought to occur in certain
primate species
10Reproductive Behavior
- Reproductive strategy the set of behaviors an
animal uses to maximize its reproductive success.
11Social Systems
- Some animals live in social groups
- Benefits of sociality
- Shared food sources
- Kin selection
- Protection from predation
- Larger prey items
12Social Systems
- Eusociality
- Invertebrates hymenopterans, isopterans
- Vertebrates naked mole rats
- Other social systems are highly variable in
composition and seasonality.
13Foraging Behavior
- Foraging behaviors should maximize efficiency.
- Foraging behaviors are innate, but may be altered
by ecology, by season, by predator abundance, by
abundance of conspecifics, or by food abundance. - Foraging behavior is necessary, but can be
dangerous. There are tradeoffs.
14Observational methods
- Ad Libitum take notes on everything you see.
- Focal Sampling One animal, observing a defined
set of behaviors. - Instantaneous/Scan Sampling At set time points,
note behaviors of one or more animals. - All occurances One behavior, note every time it
is performed.
- Each method has advantages and disadvantages and
can cause different biases.
15Experiment
- Today we will test habitat selection in isopods,
and foraging preferences in crickets.
16Treatment A
Treatment B
Phototaxis Chemotaxis Hydrotaxis
17Cricket Apparatus
18You MUST have your lab printed for next week!