Title: Animal%20Behavior%20
1Animal Behavior Experimental Design ?
- Chapter 51
- AP Themes
- AP Lab 11
2Themes of AP Biology
- The following 8 themes should be apparent to you
over the course of the course - Science as a Process
- Evolution
- Energy Transfer
- Continuity and Change
- Relationship of Structure to Function
- Regulation
- Interdependence in Nature
- Science, Technology, Society
3SoOnto the Meat of the Matter
4Animal Behavior
- A.k.a. Ethology
- Refers to anything done for survival
- Categories
- Innate inherited, developmentally fixed
- Instinctive full behavioral response at first
exposure - Learned developed during ones lifetime
- Why study Animal Behavior?
- Evolutionary significance!
- Part of ones phenotype affected by natural
selection - Natural selection acts to maximize fitness
5Innate Behaviors
- Fixed Action Patterns
- Sequence of behaviors that once triggered,
continues until their end - Sign stimulus triggers FAP
- Directed Movement in response to stimuli
- Taxis change in direction of movement
- Positive toward a stimulus
- Negative away from a stimulus
- Kinesis change in rate of movement
(nondirectional) - Migration
- Complex, but innate even captive birds exhibit
phenomenon called migratory restlessness - Imprinting
- Learning at sensitive period (critical age) that
is rapid independent of behavioral consequences - Filial imprinting animal (bird) learns its
parents - Sexual imprinting animal learns traits of mates
6Think-table-share
- What are examples of innate behaviors you have
read about?
7Innate Behaviors
Example Fixed Action Pattern
Territoriality of male stickleback
attack on red belly stimulus court on swollen
belly stimulus
8Innate Behaviors
Example Directed Movement
- Generally taxis is more complicated than kinesis.
- Descriptive terms include
- Phototaxis (light)
- Chemotaxis (chemicals)
- Trophotaxis (food)
- Many more!
- Check out http//www.sparknotes.com/biology/animal
behavior/orientationandnavigation/section1.html
for a great description!
9Innate Behaviors
- Migration How do birds know where to fly?
Imprinting How do ducks recognize their mother?
10Learned Behaviors
- Associative Learning association of a stimulus
with particular response - Classical Conditioning
- Operant Conditioning Trial Error learning
- Habituation decrease/stoppage of response to a
stimulus when no consequence arises - Think The Boy Who Cried Wolf
- Latent Learning knowledge is gained but not
applied until a later, necessary time - Ex. Setting the table
- Insight Learning problem solving
- Very few animals are known to do this!
- Humans other primates like chimpanzees
11Think-table-share
- What are examples of learned behaviors you have
read about?
12Learned Behavior
- Classical Conditioning
- Connects a reflex behavior with an unrelated
stimulus - Pavlovs dogs
- Operant Conditioning
- Trial Error
- Connects voluntary behavior with a reward or
punishment
Skinner Box mouse learns to associate pressing
a lever with a food reward
13Social Behaviors
- Communication Language
- Song or sound
- Dance (bee waggle dance communicates food)
- Pheromones
- Cooperation
- Agonistic Behaviors threat and submission
rituals usually symbolic - Dominance Hierarchy pecking order
- Altruistic Behavior self-sacrifice for
betterment of the group - Evolutionary advantage?
14Social Behaviors
15Communication Pheromones
Female mosquitoes use CO2 concentrations to
locate victims
The female lion lures male by spreading sex
pheromones, but also by posture movements
16AP Lab 11 Animal Behavior
- Overview
- In this investigation you will observe the
behavior of an insect and design an experiment to
investigate its responses to environmental
variables. - Objectives
- Practice experimental design
- Recognize that organism distribution occurs on a
resource gradient - Recognize the difference between a kinesis and a
taxis - Measure the effects of environmental variables on
habitat selection in a controlled experiment - Describe some different types of insect mating
behaviors
17AP Lab 11 Pre-lab
- Choose a lab group
- For homework you must
- Read complete the documentation I provide
- Visit the Prentice Hall Lab Bench website
- Complete the post lab questions online quiz
- In class you will
- Design a CONTROLLED experiment with your lab
group - Design a method of analyzing your data
- Data charts, graphs, photos, etc.
- Display your findings on a poster present it to
your classmates
18EXTRA CREDIT OPPORTUNITY!
- We need pill bugs!
- Bring a container of pill bugs to class by
- Thursday, September 15, 2011
- You should drop them off before school!
- Be sure your bugs have
- AIR!
- A moist substrate
- soil and damp paper towel works well
- Food
- apple or potato slices work well
19Practice Questions
- Which of the following statements is false?
- a. Behavior patterns are inherited.
- b. Instinctive behavior involves a complete
response to a key stimulus the first time it is
encountered. - c. Behavior evolved as a result of natural
selection. - d. Reproductive success is responsible for
perpetuating behavior patterns. - e. The mechanisms underlying instinctive and
learned behavior are the same.
- The cells surrounding milk-producing cells in the
female mammary gland contract shortly after the
female hears the cry of an infant. This is an
example of - a. a response that is not a behavior.
- b. instinctive behavior.
- c. imprinting behavior.
- d. learned behavior.
20Practice Questions
- A cat explores all the rooms of a new home even
though such exploration is NOT rewarded. Later,
when the cat begins to feel chilled, it goes
directly to the warmest room. This is an example
of - a. classical conditioning.
- b. echolocation.
- c. latent learning.
- d. imprinting.
- e. all of these
- A child grabs a dog's ear, and the dog responds
by biting the child. Both behaviors are repeated
once again the next day, and again a day later.
The child never grabs a dog's ear again. This
sequence of events is an example of - a. insight learning.
- b. latent learning.
- c. operant conditioning.
- d. imprinting.
21Practice Questions
- Horticulturists use periodic discharges of loud
sounds to scare birds away from their fruit
trees. After several days birds can be seen
ignoring the sounds due to - a. habituation.
- b. imprinting.
- c. conditioning.
- d. insight learning.
- e. instinct.
- Humans, and other primates , differ from most
animals in their ability to learn by - a. conditioning.
- b. imprinting.
- c. habituation.
- d. insight.
- e. latent learning.
22AP Lab 11
- Animal Behavior
- You must understand
- Kinesis
- Taxis
- Controls Variables
- You must collect
- Ants
- Pillbugs (rolly pollies)
- You must design
- A CONTROLLED experiment
- A choice chamber
- A clear measurement scheme
23Sample Choice Chamber
24Sample Data Chart
Time in Minutes of Pill Bugs in Light Chamber of Pill Bugs in Dark Chamber
0 5 5
0.5 4 6
1.0 4 6
1.5 3 7
2.0 3 7
2.5 4 6
3.0 3 7
3.5 2 8
4.0 3 7
4.5 4 6
5.0 2 8
5.5 2 8
6.0 1 9
6.5 2 8
7.0 2 8
7.5 1 9
8.0 0 10
25Sample Graph