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Behavioral Ecology. Behavior-what an animal does and how it does it Behavioral ecology-is a scientific field of study that looks at how behavior is controlled and how it contributes to survival and reproductive success.
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Behavioral Ecology • Behavior-what an animal does and how it does it • Behavioral ecology-is a scientific field of study that looks at how behavior is controlled and how it contributes to survival and reproductive success
Behavioral ecologists distinguish between proximate and ultimate causes of behavior • Proximate causes of behavior focus on • Environmental stimuli that trigger a behavior • Genetic and sensory motor mechanisms underlying a behavior • Ultimate causes of behavior focus on • The evolutionary significance of a behavior
Ethology-study of animal behavior, particularly in their natural environments
Types of Behavior • Innate behaviors • Automatic, developmentally fixed • Learned behaviors • Modified by experience
Innate Behavior • Fixed action patterns (FAP) • Sequence of innate behaviors that is essentially unchangeable & usually carried to completion once it is initiated/triggered by a stimulus • Example: in male stickleback fish, the stimulus for attach behavior is the red underside of an intruder
Without a red underside, no aggressive response • With a red underside, strong response is produced
Imprinting • Type of behavior that includes both learning and innate components • Generally irreversible • Distinguished from other types of learning by a sensitive period • Limited phase in an animal’s development that is the only time when certain behaviors can be learned • Example: young geese
Konrad Lorenz showed that when baby geese spent the first few hours of their life with him, they imprinted on him as their parent
Conservationists have taken advantage of imprinting in programs to save the whooping crane from extinction.
Many behaviors have a strong genetic component • Many animal movements are under substantial genetic influences • These types of movements are called directed movements
Directed Movements • Kinesis • A simple change in activity or turning rate in response to a stimulus • Example: Sow bugs • Taxis • More or less automatic, oriented movement toward or away from a stimulus • Example: many stream fish
-become more active in dry areas and less active in humid areas -automatically swim in an upstream direction
Animal Signals and Communication • A signal is a behavior that causes a change in another animal’s behavior • Many animals communicate through odors by emitting chemical signals called pheromones pheromone perfume
Environment Influences the Development of Behaviors • Learning-is the modification of behavior based on specific experiences • Habituation-is a loss of responsiveness to stimuli • “cry-wolf” effect
Environmental Influences continued… • Associative learning-learning to associate one feature of the environment with another feature • Classical conditioning-learning to associate certain stimuli with reward or punishment • http://nobelprize.org/educational_games/medicine/pavlov/index.html • Operant conditioning-occurs as an animal learns to associate one of its behaviors with a reward or punishment
Operant learning-associate behavior with a reward or punishment
Behavioral Influences continued… • Cognition-the ability of an animal’s nervous system to perceive, store, process, and use information from sensory receptors
Natural selection favors behaviors that increase survival and reproductive success • Foraging behavior-includes not only eating, but also mechanisms used in searching for, recognizing, and capturing food. It represents a compromise between the benefits of nutrition and the cost of obtaining food. • Mating behavior and mate choice- include the seeking or attracting of mates, selecting a mate, and competing for a mate
Agonistic behaviors-are often ritualized contests that determine which competitor gains access to a resource, such as food or mates.
Social Behaviors • Altruism–occurs when animals behave in ways that reduce their individual fitness but increase the fitness of other individuals in the population • Inclusive fitness-the total effect an individual has on proliferating its genes by producing its own offspring • The natural selection that favors altruistic behavior by enhancing reproductive success of relative is called- kin selection