This document provides an overview of animal behavior concepts for an AP Biology course. It defines behavior and discusses why it is studied from an evolutionary perspective. It also covers types of behaviors such as innate versus learned, fixed action patterns, imprinting, habituation, and communication. Environmental and genetic factors that influence phenotypes and behavior are examined. Different forms of social behaviors like cooperation, dominance hierarchies, and altruism are also summarized.
Ethology is the scientific and objective study of animal behaviour, usually with a focus on behaviour under natural conditions, and viewing behaviour as an evolutionarily adaptive trait. Ethology is a branch of zoology concerned with the study of animal behavior. Ethologists take a comparative approach, studying behaviors ranging from kinship, cooperation, and parental investment, to conflict, sexual selection, and aggression across a variety of species.
Ethology is the scientific and objective study of animal behaviour, usually with a focus on behaviour under natural conditions, and viewing behaviour as an evolutionarily adaptive trait. Ethology is a branch of zoology concerned with the study of animal behavior. Ethologists take a comparative approach, studying behaviors ranging from kinship, cooperation, and parental investment, to conflict, sexual selection, and aggression across a variety of species.
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2. AP Biology
What is behavior?
Behavior
everything an animal does & how it does it
response to stimuli in its environment
3. AP Biology
Why study behavior?
Evolutionary perspective…
part of phenotype
acted upon by natural selection
lead to greater fitness?
lead to greater survival?
lead to greater reproductive success?
4. AP Biology
What questions can we ask?
Proximate causes
immediate stimulus & mechanism
“how” & “what” questions
Ultimate causes
evolutionary significance
how does behavior
contribute to survival
& reproduction
adaptive value
“why” questions
male songbird
what triggers singing?
how does he sing?
why does he sing?
how does daylength influence breeding?
why do cranes breed in spring?
Courtship behavior in cranes
what…how… & why questions
5. AP Biology
Example
If your arm touches a hot plate, your
arm automatically recoils…
What might be the proximate and
ultimate causes of this behavior?
6. AP Biology
What is the difference between
innate and learned behaviors?
innate behaviors
automatic, fixed, “built-in”, no “learning curve”
despite different environments,
all individuals exhibit the behavior
ex. early survival, reproduction, kinesis, taxis
learned behaviors
modified by experience
variable, changeable
flexible with a complex & changing
environment
7. AP Biology
Innate behaviors
Fixed action patterns (FAP)
sequence of behaviors essentially unchangeable
& conducted to completion once started
Triggered by a specific stimulus!!
sign stimulus
the releaser that triggers a FAP
male sticklebacks exhibit
aggressive territoriality
9. AP Biology
Goose fixed action patter
The goose will retrieve the egg in the
same manner, even if the egg is
removed
10. AP Biology
Proximate and ultimate causes for the FAP
attack behavior in male stickleback fish
Figure 51.4
ULTIMATE CAUSE: By chasing away other male sticklebacks, a male decreases
the chance that eggs laid in his nesting territory will be fertilized by another male.
BEHAVIOR: A male stickleback fish attacks other male sticklebacks that invade its nesting
territory.
PROXIMATE CAUSE: The red belly of the intruding male acts as a sign stimulus
that releases aggression in a male stickleback.
11. AP Biology
What does it mean that both
“nature and nurture” can
determine an animal’s behavior?
Animal behavior often involves a
combination of genetic programming
and environmental factors.
12. AP Biology
Explain how researchers studying
the fruitless gene proved that
there genes are involved in
determining behavior
13. AP Biology
What are some environmental
factors that can influence
phenotypes?
14. AP Biology
Figure 35.3
High-interaction mother Low-interaction mother
Pups become
fearful adults
Pups become
relaxed adults
Pups become fearful adults
Pups become relaxed adults
Cross-fostering
experiment
Female pups become
high-interaction mothers
Female pups become
low-interaction mothers
15. AP Biology
How does this study illustrate the
influence of the environment on
behavior?
behavioral changes can be passed to
future generations the social environment
Interactions with the mother changed gene
expression in the rats which affected its
development of its neuroendocrine system
(fight or flight response)
16. AP Biology
What is habituation? (learning)
An animal learns not to respond to a
repeated stimulus that conveys little or no
information.
17. AP Biology
What are the ultimate causes of
habituation?
May increase reproductive fitness by
allowing an animal’s nervous system to
focus on stimuli that signal
food,
mates, or
real danger.
20. AP Biology
Figure 35.5B
Normal bird (imprinted)
Bird reared in isolation
0 0.5 1.0
Frequency
(kilocycles/second)
5
4
3
2
1
5
4
3
2
1
Time (seconds)
1.5 2.0 2.5
21. AP Biology
Example of Imprinting
Figure 51.5
BEHAVIOR: Young geese follow and imprint on their mother.
PROXIMATE CAUSE: During an early, critical developmental stage, the young
geese observe their mother moving away from them and calling.
ULTIMATE CAUSE: On average, geese that follow and imprint on their mother
receive more care and learn necessary skills, and thus have a greater chance of
surviving than those that do not follow their mother.
22. AP Biology
Conservation biologists
have taken advantage of
imprinting by young
whooping cranes as a
means to teach the
birds a migration
route. A pilot wearing
a crane suit in an
Ultralight plane acts
as a surrogate parent.
Conservation
teaching cranes to migrate
25. AP Biology
What is the difference between
taxis and kinesis?
Taxis
change in direction
automatic movement toward (positive taxis) or
away from (negative taxis) a stimulus
Ex: phototaxis (towards light) hydrotaxis (towards
water)
Kinesis
Random movement in response to a stimulus
Ex: starting or stopping, changing speed, turning
more/less frequently
26. AP Biology
Sow bugs
Become more active in dry areas and less
active in humid areas
Figure 51.7a
Dry open
area
Moist site
under leaf
(a) Kinesis increases the chance that a sow bug will encounter and
stay in a moist environment.
27. AP Biology
Learned behavior
Associative learning
learning to associate
a stimulus with a
consequence
operant conditioning
classical conditioning
28. AP Biology
Operant conditioning
Skinner box
Trial and error learning: mouse learns to
associate behavior (pressing lever) with
reward (food pellet)
B. F. Skinner
29. AP Biology
Classical conditioning
Ivan Pavlov’s dogs
connect reflex behavior (salivating at sight of
food) to associated (irrelevant stimulus (ringing
bell)
30. AP Biology
Animal Behavior Review Questions
Match the description/example with the correct behavior
category
A. Classical conditioning
B. Fixed Action Pattern
C. Imprinting
D. Operant conditioning
1. Highly stereotyped sequence of behaviors that, once begun, is
usually carried to completion
2. Learning that occurs during a specific time period; generally
irreversible
3. Association with irrelevant stimulus with a fixed physiological
response
4. Trial and Error learning
31. AP Biology
Social behaviors
Interactions between individuals
develop as evolutionary adaptations
communication / language
agonistic behaviors
dominance hierarchy
cooperation
altruistic behavior
32. AP Biology
What are the various ways in
which animals can communicate?
Visual
Audible
Electrical
Chemical
Tactile
Used to indicate dominance, find food,
establish territory, and ensure
reproductive success!
34. AP Biology
Examples of communication
Bird song
species identification & mating ritual
Visual and auditory
mixed learned & innate
Nocturnal Animals
Odor, sound
Fish
Chemical, auditory,
visual
Red-winged blackbird
35. AP Biology
What are pheromones?
Pheromones
chemical signal that stimulates a
response from other individuals
alarm pheromones
sex pheromones
36. AP Biology
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
Figure 51.9a, b
(a) Minnows are widely dispersed in an aquarium
before an alarm substance is introduced.
(b) Within seconds of the alarm substance being
introduced, minnows aggregate near the
bottom of the aquarium and reduce their movement.
37. AP Biology
Agonistic Behavior
Threats, rituals, and sometimes combat
that determines which competitor gains
access to a resource
Caused by conflicts over food, mates, or
territories
39. AP Biology
AP Biology
Dominance Hierarchies
A higher ranking animal has greater
access to resources than a lower ranking
animal.
Decided by confrontation during which
one animal gives way to another.
Once established, little or no time is
wasted in fighting.
Dominant male mates more often with the
females.
40. AP Biology
Social behaviors
Pack of African dogs
hunting wildebeest
cooperatively
White pelicans “herding”
school of fish
Cooperation
working together in coordination
Tends to increase
the fitness of the individual
and survival of the
population
41. AP Biology
AP Biology
Social behaviors
Altruistic behavior
Reduces individual fitness but
increases fitness of others in a population
kin selection
increasing survival of close relatives passes
these genes on to the next generation
How can this be of adaptive value? Belding ground squirrel
42. AP Biology
In naked mole rat populations
Nonreproductive individuals may sacrifice
their lives protecting the reproductive
individuals from predators
Figure 51.33
43. AP Biology
AP Biology
Social Behavior & Reproduction
Natural selection has favored mechanisms
that promote successful reproduction.
Behavior is thus adaptive—behavioral
traits can evolve.
Sexual competition among males has
contributed to the evolution of large size,
brilliant breeding colors, antlers, etc.
Known as sexual selection and the traits
are called secondary sexual
characteristics.