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AP Bio (Unit 1)

front 1

Behavior

back 1

The nervous system's response to a stimulus and carried out by the muscular or hormonal system. They can be subject to natural selection.

front 2

Behavioral Ecology

back 2

The study of the ecological and evolutionary basis for animal behavior.

front 3

Proximate Causation

back 3

Addresses how a behavior occurs or is modified, such as Tinbergen's questions 1 and 2.

front 4

Ultimate Causation

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Addresses why a behavior occurs in the content of natural selection, including Tinbergen's questions 3 and 4

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Fixed Action Pattern (Innate)

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Sequence of unlearned, innate behaviors that is unchangeable.

  • One initiated, it is usually carried to completion
  • Triggered by an external cue called sign stimulus
  • Greylag Goose's Egg retrieval behavior

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Innate behavior

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developmentally fixed and does not vary amonf individuals

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Learning

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The modification of behavior based on specific experiences

front 8

Imprinting (innate)

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A behavior that includes learning and innate components and is generally irreversible.

  • Distinguished from other learning by a sensitive period
  • A sensitive period is a limited developmental phase that is the only time when certain behaviors can be learned
  • Young whopping cranes can imprint on humans in "crane suits" who then lead crane migrations

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Habituation (learned)

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The ability to learn to ignore irrelevant stimuli that don't provide appropriate feedback

  • Gray squirrels will eventually ignore alarm calls if they are not followed by actual attacks

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Associative learning

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When animals associate one feature of their environment with another

front 11

Classical conditioning

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A type of associative learning in which an arbitrary stimulus is associated with a reward or punishment

  • Pavlov's dog, when they would ring a bell to signal food is coming.

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Operant Conditioning

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A type of associative learning which an animals learns to associate one of its behaviors with a reward or punishment.

  • Also called as trial and error learning
  • Predators may learn to avoid specific types of prey associated with a past painful experience.

front 13

Spaital Learning

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A complex modification of behavior based on experience with the spatial structure of the environment

  • Niko Tinbergen showed how digger wasps use landmarks to find nest entrances
  • Cognitive map is an internal representation of spatial relationships between objects in animal's surrondings

front 14

Cognition

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The process of knowing that may include awareness, reasoning, recollection, and judgment

  • Problem Solving, the process of devising a strategy to overcome an obstacle

front 15

Maturation

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Some behaviors that improve over time attributed to learning or maturation

  • Development of neuromuscular systems that allows behavioral improvement
  • Such as white crowned sparrow memorizing the songs of its species during an early sensitive period
  • The bird then learns to sing the song during a second learning phase

front 16

Social Learning

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Learning through the observation of others and forms the roots of culture

  • Culture is a system of information transfer through observation or teaching that influences behavior of individuals in a population
  • Young chimpanzees learning to crack palm nuts with stones by copying older chimpanzees
  • Vervet monkeys give and respond ti distinct alarm calls for different predators

front 17

Behavioral Rhythms

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When some animal's behavior is affected by the animal's circadian rhythm, daily cycle of rest and activity

  • Behaviors such as migration and reproduction are linked to changing seasons, or circannual rhythm
  • Such as daylight and darkness, they're common seasonal cues
  • Some can also be linked to lunar cycle that affected tidal movements.

front 18

Migration

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Environmental cues can trigger movement in a particular direction

  • Animals orient themselves using the position of the sun and their circadian clock, that is an internal 24 hour clock that is an integral part of their nervous system
  • The position of the North Star
  • The Earth's magnetic field
    • Piloting is the movement of animals from landmark to another
    • Orientation is the movement along a compass line
    • Navigation is the animal's ability to orient along a compass line ton determine their location in relation to their destination

front 19

Animal Signals and Communication

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A signal is a behavior that causes a change in another animal's behavior

  • Communication is the transmission and reception of signals
  • Animals communicate using visual, chemical, tactile, and auditory signals

front 20

Fruit Fly Courtship

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A male identifies a female of the same species and orients toward her

  • Chemical communication: he smells female's chemical in the air
  • Visual Communication: he sees the female and orients his body towards hers
  • Tactile communication: he taps the female with a foreleg
  • Chemical communication: he chemically confirms the female's identity
  • Auditory communication: he extends and vibrates his wing

front 21

Waggle dance

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Honeybees show complex communication with symbolic language

  • Use it to communicate information about the distance and direction of a food source

front 22

Phermones

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Odors that emit chemical substances

  • Used to attract mates
  • Honeybee can produce a pheromone that affects the development and behavior of female workers and male drones
  • When a minnow or catfish is injured, an alarm substance in the fish's skin disperses in the water, inducing a fright response among fish in the area

front 23

Nocturnal animals and diurnal aniamls

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Most terrestrial mammals depend on olfactory and auditory communication, while diurnal animals use visual and auditory.

front 24

Foraging Behavior

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Natural selection refines behaviors that enhance the efficiency of feeding.

Such as recognizing, searching for, capturing, and eating food items

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Optimal Foraging Model

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Where they see the compromise between benefits of nutrition and the cost to obtain that food.

  • The costs of obtaining food include energy expenditure and risk of being eaten while foraging
  • Natural selection should favor foraging behavior that minimizes the costs and maximizes the benefits

front 26

Mating Behavior and Mate Choice

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Seeking or attracting mates, competing for mates, and caring for offspring.

  • The base it off of the possibility that the opposite sex will give parental care, best to chose the most competent mate
  • Genetic quality is important when males provide no parental care and sperm are their only contribution

front 27

Promiscuous

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No strong pair-bonds or lasting relationships.

front 28

Monogamous relationship

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When one male mates with one female, usually monogamous mating systems have similar external morphologies

front 29

Polygamous

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where an individual of one sex mates with several individuals of other sex, usually sexually dimorphic

  • Polygyny, one male mates with many females.
  • The males are usually more showy and larger than females
  • Polyandry, one female mates with many males
  • Females are often show showy than the males

front 30

Sexual Dimorphism

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Results from sexual selection, a form of natural selection

  • In intersexual selection, members of one sex choose mates on the basis of certain traits
  • Intersexual selection involves competition between members of the same for mates.

front 31

Mate choice by Females

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Female choice is a type of intersexual comepetition

  • They can drive sexual selection by choosing males with specific behaviors or features of anatomy

front 32

Mate choice copying

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A behavior where individuals copy the mate choice of others

front 33

Male competition for Mates

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Male competition for mates is a source of intrasexual selection that can reduce variation among males.

  • Such as agonistic behavior, that is ritualized contest that determines which competitor gains access to resource.

front 34

Applying Game Theory

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Evaluates alternative strategies where the outcome on each individual's strategy and the strategy of other individuals

  • Each side-blotched lizard has a blue, orange, or yellow throat.
  • Each color is associated with a specific strategy for obtaining mates.

front 35

Altruism

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Natural selection favors behaviors that maximizes an individual's survival and reproduction

front 36

Inclusive fitness

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the total effect an individual has on proliferating its genes by producing offspring and helping close relatives produce offspring

front 37

Hamilton's Rule and Kin Selection

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Natural Selection favors altruism when rB> C

  • Kin selection is the natural selection that favors this kind of altruistic behavior by enhancing reproductive success of relatives

front 38

Reciprocal Altruism

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Altruistic behavior toward unrelated individuals can be adapative if the aided individual returns the favor in the future

front 39

Kinesis

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undirected change in the speed of an animal's movement in response to a stimulus
-random movement
-animal is no longer in a favorable environment

front 40

Taxis

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directed movement in response to a stimulus
-not random, towards a stimulus