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Chapter 51 • ~Animal Behavior Behavior-what an animal does and why it • • • • • does it. Ethology~ study of animal behavior Behavior results from both genes and environmental factors. Causation: •proximate~ physiological & genetic mechanisms of behavior •ultimate~ evolutionary significance of behavior Observation of Magnolia Warbler • Proximate • Breeds in spring and early summer • Hypothesis-effect of increased day length on photoreceptors brings on breeding. • Stimulus results in neural and hormonal changes that induce this behavior. • Ultimate • Why did natural selection favor this behavior? • Hypothesis-breeding is most productive or adaptive at this time. • Food more plentiful. Innate Behavior • Developmentally fixed • Often attributed to genetic programming without environmental influence. • Baby birds opening mouth for food • Key point-is the range of environmental differences among individuals does not appear to alter the behavior. Innate Behavior • Fixed action pattern (FAP)~ sequence of acts; unchangeable; carried to completion • Sign stimulus ~these patterns are triggered by an external sensory stimulus • Ex: 3-spined stickleback (Tinbergen ‘73 Nobel) • Utilizes its color vision to identify red-undersided males that try to invade its territory. Foraging • Mechanisms animals use to recognize, search for, and capture food items. • Optimal foraging theory • Feeding costs verses feeding benefits. Behavioral ecology concentrates on ultimate hypotheses • Animals utilize their genetic variation to express behaviors that optimize their fitness • Natural selection favors behaviors that enhance survival and reproductive success. Learning-experience based modification of behavior • Maturation~ behavior due to developing physiological changes. • Habituation~ loss of responsiveness to stimuli that convey no information; simple learning • Imprinting~ limited learning within a specific time period •critical period (Lorenz, ‘73 Nobel) Associative Learning • Connecting two different stimuli • Ivan Pavlov-Classical conditioning • Involves associating arbitrary stimuli with either a reward or punishment. • Skinner-Operant Conditioning-trial and error • Induced manipulation of levers by rats after awarding them with food. Associative Learning • •classical conditioning~ Pavlov’s dogs •operant conditioning (trial and error)~ “Skinner’s box” Social behavior • Sociobiology~ evolutionary theory applied to social behavior (Hamilton) • Agonistic behavior~ contest behavior determining access to resources • Dominance hierarchy~ linear “pecking order” • Territoriality~ an area an individual defends excluding others • Mating systems: •promiscuous~ no strong pair bonds •monogamous~ one male/one female • •polygamous~ one with many •polygyny~ one male/many females •polyandry~ one female/many males QuickTime™ and a Cinepak decompressor are needed to see this picture. Agnostic Behavior • Competition for a resource • Sometimes simply ritual • Signifies intent but causes no harm • Causes social hierarchies to develop in some animals • Dominance hierarchy • Territoriality Figure 51.19 Ritual wrestling by rattlesnakes Mating behavior • Parental investment-time and resources required to produce an offspring. • Female usually has higher parental investment-eggs more costly to produce • Sexual selection-competition among males for the female to choice him. • Females usually care for young. Paternity not always know. Very few have only male paternal care. Altruistic behavior-reducing individual fitness to increase that of another • Inclusive fitness~ total effect an individual has on proliferating its genes by its own offspring and aid to close relatives • Coefficient of relatedness~ measures inclusive fitness by proportion of genes that are identical because of common ancestors Kin selection~ aiding related individuals altruistically can result in more identical genes • • Reciprocal altruism~ exchange of aid; humans?