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Learning to describe and quantify animal behavior

Learning to describe and quantify animal behavior. Objectives 1) Be able to describe the scientific method for making observations and testing hypothesis about animal behavior 2) Be able to compare and contrast the multiple met. It all begins with an observation…. Squid Inking.

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Learning to describe and quantify animal behavior

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  1. Learning to describe and quantify animal behavior

  2. Objectives • 1) Be able to describe the scientific method for making observations and testing hypothesis about animal behavior • 2) Be able to compare and contrast the multiple met

  3. It all begins with an observation… Squid Inking

  4. Scientific Method • Observations • Form a hypothesis • Null hypothesis • Alternate hypothesis

  5. Scientific Method • Make Specific Predictions • Determine your independent and dependent variables • (Independent variable) causes a change in (Dependent Variable) and it isn't possible that (Dependent Variable) could cause a change in (Independent Variable). • Determine what specific behavioral response are you measuring • Are you measuring the state of an animal or an action/event that is occurring?

  6. Scientific Method • Test Predictions • Identify or develop sampling or experimental techniques to test hypothesis • Select analytical tools to determine if your data supports you null or alternate hypothesis

  7. Behavior Experiments: Testing your hypothesis • The method you use often depends on your question • 1) What is the effect of factor X on variable Y? Manipulative Experiments - • Pros: allows you to isolate variables • Cons: experiments can be difficult and time consuming; behaviors hard to observe in some manipulations

  8. Behavior Experiments: Testing your hypothesis • The method you use often depends on your question • 1) “Are there spatial or temporal differences in Variable Y?” • Requires survey data to sample behaviors or another variable at two different sites or times • Pros: sampling is often easier than manipulation • Cons: Correlation is not causation! • Many times survey data is just a first step

  9. Behavior Experiments: Testing your hypothesis • For instance: • Do fish avoid shallow water to avoid foraging birds? • Hypothesis: fish numbers should be lower in shallow habitats with high numbers of foraging birds

  10. Behavior Experiments: Testing your hypothesis • Other variables might explain this pattern • Seagrass density? • Nutrients? • Abundance of fish prey? • Human disturbance? Bird abundance Fish abundance in shallow habitats

  11. Behavior Experiments: Testing your hypothesis • The method you use often depends on your question • But what if your question is about the difference in strategies or adaptations within or amongst species? • You can perform comparisons between individuals of the same species • Do fish in schools avoid predators better than solitary fish? • Often complicated by confounding variables- solitary animals behave differently than schooling animals

  12. The comparative method • A comparison of groups of related species to determine how their differences in behavior reflect their differences in ecology

  13. Testing your hypothesis • Method depends on your question • 1) Manipulative Experiments • 2)Comparisons between individuals of the same species • Often complicated by confounding variables • 3) Comparisons among species • Differentiate different adaptations, or environmental selection on entire species • Why does Species A use X Strategy and Species B use Y strategy?

  14. Black Back vs. Kittiwake gulls • Black back gulls nest on the ground • Observed behaviors • Adults fly over approaching predators and send out alarm calls for attacks • Adults don’t defecate near nests • Remove empty egg shells (white interiors) • Chicks are camouflaged and hide in vegetation • Hypothesis: These are adaptations to avoid predation, because gulls nests are vulnerable to attack on the ground

  15. Black Back vs. Kittiwake gulls • Kittiwake gulls nest on cliffs, and are therefore harder to attack and less vulnerable to predation pressure

  16. Problems with the Comparative Method • Alternative hypothesis • Could the difference between these two gulls be due to other traits? Competition? Proximity to feeding grounds?

  17. Problems with the Comparative Method • Alternative hypothesis • Doesn’t quantify ecological variables • Do eggshells make chicks more vulnerable to predators

  18. Problems with the Comparative Method • Alternative hypothesis • Doesn’t quantify ecological variables • Alternative adaptive peaks or non-adaptive differences • Not all differences between species must be adaptive

  19. Problems with the Comparative Method • Alternative hypothesis • Doesn’t quantify ecological variables • Alternative adaptive peaks or non-adaptive differences • No Statistical Analysis • Common in many early ecological studies

  20. Phylogenetically Independent Contrasts • Species are not independent • Species can share traits because they share a common ancestor

  21. Phylogenetically Independent Contrasts • But what if you found out Animals A,B,C all descended from a common ancestor? F A D B C E

  22. Phylogenetically Independent Contrasts • Hyptohesize Larger rodents have larger range sizes (due to metabolic needs) • Compile species values, and then regress body mass against home range size Home range (Dependent) Body Mass (Independent)

  23. Phylogenetically Independent Contrasts • However, a species body size or home range size is not independent of its relatives • Therefore species are not necessarily independent data poits

  24. Phylogenetically Independent Contrasts • Species are not independent • Species can share traits because they share a common ancestor • Confounds independence • Must take evolutionary relationships/phylogeny into account and remove phylogenetic independence

  25. Phylogenetically Independent Contrasts • Felsenstein (1985) • A set of traits • A fully resolved phylogeny • A model of evolution • (time of species evolution, time of divergence etc)

  26. Comparative studies • Most useful to examine broad trends in evolution, social organization, and ecology • Proper use requires • Controlling for social organization • Avoiding or addressing confounding variables using experimental manipulation • Using phylogenetically independent contrast to account for evolutionary constraints • Account for alternative hypothesis and address them when necessary

  27. Returning to comparing gull species • Comparative studies can yield specific hypothesis to test with experiments • What happens if egg shells aren't removed?

  28. But behavior is not always adaptive • Some behaviors are just a different way to accomplish the same goal • Unfortunately, determining if a behavior isnt adaptive is an exclusionary case

  29. Class Exercise Designing Behavioral Experiments Sea Turtles and Light Pollution

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