Ch51 Behavior Ecology. Behavioral ecology is the study of the ecological and evolutionary basis for...

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Ch51 Behavior Ecology

• Behavioral ecology is the study of the ecological and evolutionary basis for animal behavior

• A fixed action pattern a sequence of unlearned, innate behaviors that is unchangeable

• Once initiated, it is usually carried to completion

• triggered by an external cue, a sign stimulus

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZfcGZCGdGVE&list=PL4C2DAEF2C65122DE

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vUNZv-ByPkU

• Fixed Action Pattern in Geese:– If an egg is taken from them they will not stop

until it is returned, ‘head bobbing motion’ to roll egg back to nest.

What role does the environment play in signaling?

• Phototropism – growth of a plant towards (+) or away (-) from light

http://plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/movements/tropism/phototropism/corn/cornworship.html

Sunflowers track the sun Why?

Circadian Rhythms

• Process that follows a routine 24 hour cycle

• What is the signal?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mUwbbLZANVE

Photoperiodism• A physiological response to the relative

lengths of day and night

Brain makes melatonin

• When there is less light, the SCN tells the brain to make more melatonin so you get drowsy.

Melatonin controls sleep

Jet lag

• What is the signal?

Monarch Migration

• The navigation of the fall migration of the Monarchs to their overwintering grounds in central Mexico uses a "sun compass" that depends upon a circadian clock in their antennae.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x0m_rK_WpjQ

Animal Signals and Communication

• signal is a behavior that causes a change in another animal’s behavior

• Communication is the transmission and reception of signals

Fruit fly courtship

• http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/fruit-fly-courtship

Figure 39.16

(a) Worker bees (b) Round dance (food near)

(c) Waggle dance (food distant)

Location A Location B Location C

Beehive

A

BC

30

30

Waggle Dance• A bee returning from

the field performs a dance to communicate information about the distance and direction of a food source

http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/weirdest-bees-dance

Nature vs. Nuture

• what behaviors are genetically based and what is learned (Nature vs. Nurture)

Serial Killer, Ted Bundy

Is a serial killer born that way?

Cross-fostering Exp• CA mice: aggressive, lots parental care• White-footed mice: less aggressive, little parental

care

Table 39.2

What can you conclude? Nature vs Nuture?

Dogs Decoded: At 31 Minutes: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yN96Gid6Kjo

Prey Selection

• Coastal populations feed mostly on banana slugs, while inland populations rarely eat banana slugs

• Studies have shown >60% Coastal snakes ate the banana slugs, <20% of inland snakes did

Figure 39.25

What can you conclude? Nature vs Nuture?

Cross-fostering Exp

Genetics or Environment?

• Twin Studies-Compare identical twins raised apart vs twins raised together

Learning

• the modification of behavior based on specific experiences

• Imprinting – the establishment of a

long-lasting behavioral response to a particular individual during a specific time in development, the sensitive period

Figure 39.17a

(a) Konrad Lorenz and geese

Conservation efforts

• Young whooping cranes can imprint on humans in “crane suits” who then lead crane migrations using ultralight aircraft

Figure 39.17b

(b) Pilot and cranes

Associative Learning

Figure 39.19

Blue Jay learns that Monarchs will cause them to vomit

Classical Conditioning (Pavlov's Dogs) 

OPERANT CONDITIONINGInvolves "training" a behavior using a reward or punishment system.  

Skinner Box

Mating Systems and Parental Care

• Monogamous vs Polygamous?

• Is paternal care crucial for survival of offspring?

• Certainty of paternity?

Altruism

• Natural selection favors behavior that maximizes an individual’s survival and reproduction – selfish

• some animals behave in ways that reduce their individual fitness but increase the fitness of others - altruism

Inclusive fitness & Kin selection• natural selection that

favors this kind of altruistic behavior by enhancing reproductive success of relatives

• Ex:• Belding ground

squirrels – alarm call when predators nearby

• Naked mole rats – in colonies of 75+, only one queen and 3 kings do all the reproduction

Hamilton’s rule

• Natural selection favors altruism when rB C

• This inequality is called Hamilton’s rule• Would you risk your life to save your

brother/sister?

Yes!• Assume the average individual

has two children. As a result of the sister’s action

– The brother can now father two children, so B 2

– The sister has a 25% chance of dying and not being able to have two children, so C 0.25 2 0.5

– The brother and sister share half their genes on average, so r 0.5

• If the sister saves her brother, rB ( 1) C ( 0.5)

Figure 39.27

Parent A Parent B

Sibling 1 Sibling 2

½ (0.5)probability

OR

½ (0.5)probability

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