Animal Behavior
What is behavioral ecology?
Behavioral
ecology studies how
behavior is controlled and how it
develops, evolves, and contributes to
survival
Behavior is everything an animal does
and how it does it
Nature vs. Nurture?
In
biology, its not an either/or scenario
Genes and the environment both influence
behavior
Innate behavior is behavior that is
developmentally fixed, regardless of the
environment
Directed Movements
Directed movements are controlled by genes
Kineses- change in activity in response to a stimulus (pill bugs)
Taxis
= a more or less automatic,
oriented movement toward or
away from a stimulus
Example: phototaxis= moths flying
toward a light
Migration
Fixed Action Patterns
A
FAP is a sequence of innate
behaviors that is essentially
unchangeable and, once started,
is usually carried to completion
Triggered by a sign stimulus
Example: A goose will roll an egg
(or egg-like object) back into her
nest. Even if the egg is removed,
she will continue the action until
she reaches her nest.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWcadcVBXK
U
Imprinting
Imprinting is a type of behavior
that includes both learning and
innate components and is
irreversible
limited phase in an animals
development when certain
behaviors can be learned
Incubator-hatched goslings
imprinted on scientist
(Konrad Lorenz) during first
few hours of life and followed
him
Hibernation and Estivation
Hibernation: a period of dormancy to survive
the harsh, cold weather of winter.
Estivation: a period of dormancy to survive the
dry, hot weather of summer.
Learning
Learning
is the
modification of
behavior based
on specific
experiences
Habituation:
loss of
responsiveness
to stimuli that
convey little or
no information
crying wolf
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yLa-cXg8BwM
Associative Learning
Associative
learning is the
ability to associate one
feature of the environment
with another
Classical
Conditioning
an arbitrary stimulus is
associated with a reward or
punishment
Pavlovs Experiment
Operant
Conditioning
trial-and-error learning
skinner box
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qy_mIEnnlF4
Social Behaviors
Territorial
10
Communication
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFDGPgXtK-U
11
Courtship
12
Altruism & Inclusive Fitness
Most social behaviors are selfish
Altruism = when an animal behaves
in a way that reduces its individual
fitness but increases the fitness of
the other individuals in the
population
Example:
squirrels, worker bees
Helps close relatives (children,
siblings, etc.), thereby increasing the
individuals genetic representation in
the next generation inclusive
fitness