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Animal Behavior

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Title: Animal Behavior


1
Animal Behavior
2
What is behavioral ecology?
  • Behavioral ecology studies how behavior is
    controlled and how it develops, evolves, and
    contributes to survival
  • Behavior is everything an animal does and how it
    does it
  • Ethology is the scientific study of how animals
    behave, especially in natural environments

3
Understanding Behavior
  • Questions that must be asked to understand any
    behavior
  • What is the mechanistic basis of the behavior
    (chemical, anatomical, and physiological
    mechanisms)?
  • How does development of the animal, from zygote
    to mature individual, influence behavior?
  • What is the evolutionary history of the behavior?
  • How does the behavior contribute to survival and
    reproduction (fitness)?

4
Fixed Action Patterns
  • One type of behavior studied by ethologists is
    the fixed action pattern (FAP)
  • An FAP is a sequence of unlearned behavioral acts
    that is essentially unchangeable and, once
    started, is usually carried to completion
  • Triggered by a sign stimulus (some external
    sensory stimuli that triggers the behavior
  • Example Aggressive behavior in male stickleback
    fish in response to the red underside of an
    intruder fish

The following models were used to induce
aggressive behavior. The realistic model did
nothing, but the shapes with red bottoms caused
aggressive behavior
5
Imprinting
  • Imprinting is a type of behavior that includes
    both learning and innate components and is
    irreversible
  • There is a limited phase in an animals
    development which is the only time when certain
    behaviors can be learned (sensitive period)
  • Incubator-hatched goslings imprinted on scientist
    (Konrad Lorenz) during first few hours of life
    and followed him

6
Nature vs. Nurture?
  • In biology, its not an either/or scenario
  • Genes and the environment both influence behavior
  • Some behaviors can be altered based on the
    environment (still set behavior, but the behavior
    changes based on changing external conditions)
  • Other behaviors are virtually identical in a
    population . . . regardless of external stimuli
  • Innate behavior is behavior that is
    developmentally fixed, regardless of the
    environment

7
Directed Movements
  • Animal movements can have substantial genetic
    influence (directed movements)
  • Examples
  • Kinesis
  • Taxis
  • Migration

8
Directed Movements
  • Kinesis a simple change in activity or turning
    rate in response to a stimulus
  • Example pillbugs live best in moist conditions
    they move around more in dry areas and less in
    moist/humid areas
  • More movement increases likelihood they will
    encounter a moist area

9
Directed Movements
  • Taxis a more or less automatic, oriented
    movement toward or away from a stimulus
  • Example fish swimming against the current
  • Migration

10
Animal Signals Communication
  • Many interactions between organisms are a result
    of sending and receiving information that alters
    behavior
  • A signal is a behavior that causes a change in
    another animals behavior
  • Communication involves the transmission of,
    reception of, and response to signals between
    animals

11
Types of Communication
  • Chemical Communication
  • Pheromones chemically emitted odors that may
    attract organisms from several kilometers away.
    Particularly important in reproduction behavior
  • Auditory Communication
  • Bird songs and insect songs are also important in
    reproduction
  • Drosophila males produce a characteristic song
    by beating their wings

12
Environment Genetics
  • Environmental factors, such as the quality of the
    diet, the nature of social interactions, and
    opportunities for learning can influence the
    development of behaviors in every group of
    animals
  • Example Variations in diet led to rejection of
    mates in Drosophila

13
Learning (start here)
  • Learning is the modification of behavior based on
    specific experiences
  • Learning has a large range of expression
  • From simple imprinting to learn to recognize a
    parent to extremely complex . . . i.e. AP Biology
  • Habituation loss of responsiveness to stimuli
    that convey little or no information
  • If you poke a hydra, it will contract into
    itself. Yet, if you keep poking the hydra (not
    very nice), eventually it will ignore the stimuli
    if it is not harmed
  • Evolutionarily it is believed this prevents
    organisms from wasting energy on stimuli that are
    not pertinent to survival or reproduction

14
Learning
  • Spatial Learning the modification of behavior
    based on experience with the spatial structure of
    the environment, including the location of nest
    sites, hazards, food, and prospective mates
  • Example Organisms being able to recognize
    landmarks
  • This is a much more sophisticated form of
    learning because it involves learning stimulus
    that may vary in an environment

15
Learning
  • By putting together several landmarks in a
    spatial learning scheme, organisms could traverse
    to a variety of different environmental locations
  • Another possibility is the use of cognitive maps,
    an internal representation of the surrounding
    environment with spatial relations to each other
    (a mental map)
  • Sometimes it is difficult to determine if an
    organism is using spatial learning or relying on
    a cognitive map

16
Associative Learning
  • Another type of learning has to do with an
    organism learning behaviors based on experiential
    factors
  • Associative learning is the ability of many
    animals to associate one feature of the
    environment with another
  • Example Associating eating one type of insect
    with a bad taste

17
Types of Associative Learning
  • Classical Conditioning
  • an arbitrary stimulus is associated with a reward
    or punishment
  • Example Pavlovs Experiment
  • Operant Conditioning
  • trial-and-error learning
  • Example Mouse eating distasteful caterpillar OR
    a coyote getting a face full of quills from a
    porcupine

18
Cognition Problem Solving
  • Some behaviors show more sophisticated levels of
    learning
  • Cognition is the ability of an animals nervous
    system to perceive, store, process, and use
    information gathered by sensory receptors
  • Cognitive ethology studies how an animals
    nervous system and behavior interact
  • Example chimpanzees cracking open oil palm nuts
    by observing an experienced chimpanzee performing
    the task

19
Natural Selection Behaviorism
  • The genetic components of behavior evolve through
    natural selection
  • Natural selection favors behaviors that increase
    survival and reproductive success
  • Foraging behavior Balance between benefits of
    nutrition and cost of finding food (predation,
    energy, etc.)
  • Cost-benefit analysis
  • Mating systems and parental care
  • Most animals are promiscuous (no strong
    pair-bonding relationship)
  • Monogamous
  • Polygamous (usually single male with many females)

20
Reasons for mating systems
  • Finding mates, caring for young, and passing on
    genetic traits are strong determining factors in
    mate selection
  • Monogamy is important in birds. It takes a lot
    of work to feed and care for young that are
    relatively helpless. Both male and female are
    needed to provide for young, so they stick
    together
  • Polygamy occurs when the young can care for
    themselves at a young age. Males seek to
    maximize reproductive success
  • There are many other factors that influence
    behavior

21
Sexual selection
  • Reminder
  • Intersexual selection one sex chooses a mate
    based on some characteristic of the other sex
    (female usually makes the selection and males vie
    for selection)
  • Intrasexual selection competition of one sex
    for mates (males fight each other to win a
    female)

22
Evolutionary impact
  • A lot of male behaviors, or anatomical features,
    may be due to intersexual selection
  • Females choose traits and those traits become
    selected for
  • Peacock feathers, birdsong, long eyestalks in
    male stalk-eyed flies
  • Male behaviors, or anatomical features, may also
    be due to intrasexual selection
  • Agonisitic behaviors are ritualized competitions
    that teach males to fight for mates

23
Altruism Inclusive Fitness
  • Most social behaviors are selfish
  • Altruism when an animal behaves in a way that
    reduces its individual fitness but increases the
    fitness of the other individuals in the
    population
  • Example squirrels alarm call, worker bees
  • Helps close relatives (children, siblings, etc.),
    thereby increasing the individuals genetic
    representation in the next generation (saving
    close relatives) inclusive fitness

24
Reciprocal Altruism
  • Sometimes animals will behave altruistically to
    other animals that are not related
  • This behavior can be adaptive if it aids the
    animal in the future, reciprocal altruism
  • Reciprocal altruism is rare in animals
  • Limited largely to same species that live in a
    social group, but not always related (chimpanzees)

25
Social Learning
  • In addition to genetic and environmental
    influences, learning can be influenced by social
    contact
  • Social learning is learning from observing the
    behaviors of others
  • Social learning forms the roots of culture
  • Mistakenly, we believe social learning only
    occurs in humans. It may also occur in animal
    populations

26
Social Learning
  • Example Mate choice copying
  • Female guppies have been seen to mate with males
    that have been successful in attracting other
    females
  • Example Alarm calls
  • Monkeys learn different calls to symbolize
    different predators (leopards, eagles, snakes)
  • When young these calls are inaccurate (any bird
    may be given the eagle call
  • Yet, as they mature and learn to discriminate
    species, their calls become more accurate

27
What about us?
  • Biology is not limited to the study of just
    animal behaviors
  • Some scientists study how evolutionary theory
    applies to human culture, sociobiology
  • This field is highly controversial
  • Could be used to justify status quo human
    societies (caste systems)
  • Risk of oversimplification
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