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Animal Behavior CVHS Chapter 51 Behavior • What an animal does and how it does it • Proximate causation – “how” – environmental stimuli, genetics, anatomy and physiology • Ultimate causation – “why” – evolutionary significance of the behavior – Survival and reproduction Example • Observation – Blue gill sunfish breed in spring and early summer – Proximate cause – breeding is triggered by day length activating the pineal gland • Pineal gland regulates sleep and cycles – Ultimate cause –reproductive success is greater when temperature is optimal and food is abundant Ethology • The study of how animals behave in their natural environments Instinct • Innate – behavior that is genetically fixed – Inherited circuitry that guides behavior – Example – Dogs digging and burying food – Example – waggle dance of bees FAP • Fixed Action Pattern – unlearned behavior act (instinct) that is unchangeable and once initiated is carried to completion – Sign stimulus – external stimulus required to trigger the response – Example – Protective behavior of hen turkeys • FAP – mothering behavior • Sign stimulus – cheeping sounds of chicks – Deaf hen turkey = no mothering kills chicks Imprinting • Behavior that involves learned and innate components and once done is irreversible – Sensitive (critical) period – time during which the behaviors must be learned. – Example – Geese • Young geese will follow their mother and learn her behaviors • Lorenz experiments – geese imprinted on him instead of their mother – Example – Gulls • If parent does not bond will offspring during the first 2 day she will not recognize them as her own and they will most likely not survive. Nature vs. Nurture • Nature – genetic component • Nurture – environmental component • Both affect behavior • Innate behaviors – STRONG genetic component yet still requires an environment to be expressed Movement • Kinesis – change in activity or turning rate in response to a stimulus • Taxis – automatic orientation toward or away from a stimulus – Positive taxis – toward the stimulus – Negative taxis – away from the stimulus • Migration – movement over long distances Sandpipers move away from water as the wave comes in Migration Behaviors • Piloting – moves from one familiar location to another until it reaches its destination • Orientation – can detect compass directions and travels in a straight line until the destination is reached • Navigation – uses current location and compass directions to determine what direction to go Communication • Signal – behavior that elicits a response • Transmission, reception, and response to the signal = communication • Chemical – pheromones • Different species have heightened senses which are used for communication. – Visual – Auditory – Tactile Learning • Modification of behavior based on specific experiences • Habituation – learning to ignore irrelevant stimuli – “Cry wolf” • Imprinting – sensitive “critical” time period • Maturation – development of neuromuscular system that allows for behavioral improvement – Birds “learning to fly” – wings must mature first Associative Learning • Ability of an animal to associate one stimulus with another event or outcome • Classical conditioning – learning through repeated instances – Pavlov’s dogs – ringing a bell induced salivation in dogs even when there was no food • External neutral stimulus begins to have meaning • Operant conditioning – trial and error learning – Reward system – animals behavior determines Animal Cognition • The ability of an animals nervous system to perceive and make judgments about its environment • Insight learning – reasoning or innovation – problem solving – Ability to approach a new problem and figure out a way to deal with it Feeding Behavior • Foraging – essential to survival and reproduction • Herds, flocks, packs, and schools • Generalists – optimal foraging – Choose the most nutritious available that will be the least energetically expensive to consume • Specialists - highly adaptive behaviors specific for their food Social Behavior • Interaction between 2 or more animals usually within the same species • Agnostic – aggressive or submissive – Competition for a resource or mate • Dominance hierarchy – top ranking system – Pecking order of hens – top hen controls the rest – Wolves – top female allows other to mate when food is abundant • Only she mates if food is scarce Social Behavior • Territoriality – defending and excluding other individuals – Used for feeding, mating, raising young • Altruistic – behaviors the reduce the fitness of the organism and increase another’s fitness – Kin selection – family members tend to be more altruistic to one another • Coefficient of relatedness Mating Systems • Promiscuous – no strong bond between members • Monogamous – one male and one female mate for long periods of time • Polygamous – one individual mates with many – Polygyny – one male w/ many females – Polyandry – one female w/ many males