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Chap.03 Proximate factors 鄭先祐 (Ayo) 教授 國立台南大學 環境與生態學院 生態科學與技術學系 環境生態研究所 + 生態旅遊研究所 Proximate factors 1. Ultimate and proximate perspectives 2. Hormones and proximate causation 3. Neurobiological underpinnings of behavior 4. Molecular genetics and animal behavior 5. Development and animal behavior 6. Foraging in Honeybees: an integrated proximate analysis 7. Interview with Dr. Geoggrey Hill Significant natural variation exists in house finch coloration. Artificially brightened (top left to top right photo) or lightened (bottom left to bottom right photo) the plumage coloration of male house finches. Hill examined how brightening and lightening plumage coloration affected a suite of variables in male house finches. There were 40 males in the brightened condition, 20 males in the same control, and 40 males in the lightened condition. Hormones and Proximate causation introduction Endocrine system (Fig. 3.7) Neuro-hormones 兩個案例: 1. The long-term effects of in-utero exposure to hormones 2. Stress hormones and spatial memory in rats Hormones can affect input systems (sensory systems like those for smell, sight, or hearing), central nervous system function (processing), and output systems. 1. The long-term effects of in-utero exposure to hormones When male Mongolian gerbils were castrated, they spent more time with pups than did “sham” castrated males that had undergone a similar operation but were not actually castrated. 2. Stress hormones and spatial memory in rats The swimming path of the control rat was consistently near the target (T), indicating that its memory for the location of the platform was not impaired, while the swimming path of the rat that was shocked thirty minutes before being put in the water maze was random, indicating that its memory for the location of the platform was impaired by the shock. (A) Rats that receive a shock thirty minutes before their trial in the water maze spend less time near the platform (target) than did rats in the other three groups. Corticosterone levels Only rats in Group 1 (the group with decreased ability to find the area of the platform) had higher levels of corticosterone, suggesting an important memory inhibiting role for this hormone. Injected rats with a drug called methrapone, rats did not show impaired memory compared to control one. Methrapone, inhibits the production of corticosterone by blocking certain cheical reactions in the adrenal glands, where corticosterone is produced. Neurobiological underpinnings of behavior Neurobiology and learning in voles Meadow voles Males showed superior spatial learning abilities. From a neuroethological perspective, we can 1. Examine the neural substrate underlying the differences in male and female spatial learning abilities 2. Examine how components of the nervous system change as a function of a spatial learning experience. Male meadow voles spent more time near the platform in water maze trials than did female meadow voles. In meadow voles, males have more dentritic spines in both the frontal and the parietal cortex of the brain than do females. Neural plasticity The rats went through the spatial learning trails would have more dendritic spines than the control animals. This is a good example of neural pasticity. The ability of neurons to undergo change as a function of experience. Vocalizations in plainfin midshipman fish (A) The two smaller fish on the ends are type II sneaker males (who do not sing), while the fish that is second from the left is a “singing” type I parental male. Sleep and predation in Mallard ducks Sleeping individuals are more susceptible to being attacked by predators. Sleeping with one eye open and one eye shut. This type of sleep was first recorded in chickens and is best examined in mallard ducks. Birds are capable of putting one hemisphere of the brain– the hemisphere active during – into what is called slow-wave sleep. Slow-wave sleep “slow-wave” refers to the frequency of the brain waves that investigators record using a device called an electroencephalogram (EEG). This slow-wave state allows quick responses to predators, but it does not interfere with the sleeping half of the bird’s brain until danger is present. EEG recordings indicate that the part of the brain controlling the open eye during unihemispheric sleep showed the low frequency range characteristic of slow-wave sleep, while the other half showed EEG patterns that were similar to those of true sleep. In some aquatic mammals, like the fur seal, unihemispheric sleep is thought to allow individuals to swim to the surface and breathe during sleep. 問題與討論 Ayo NUTN website: http://myweb.nutn.edu.tw/~hycheng/