Chapter 9 Opener: When a bull elk bugles, other males listen.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Personality. Announcements First exam on Thursday Remember the review session tonight! BS 218 at 7pm.
Advertisements

Announcements EXAM II next Wednesday (March 14th) Review Monday (March 12th) No Class Friday (March 16th)
Biology 484 – Ethology Chapter 9 – Evolution of Communication.
Communication BIOL How did this unique trait and behaviour evolve? What is its adaptive significance?
Chapter 10 Opener: The female (left) and the male (right) of the gorgeous lizard C:\Figures\Chapter10\high-res\Alcock8e-ChOpener-10.jpg.
Chapter 6 Primate Behavior Key Terms. Social structure The composition, size, and sex ratio of a group of animals. Social structures, in part, are the.
Female reproductive success is largely determined by parental effort Male reproductive success is largely determined by mating effort Because females.
Signal Honesty Definitions and history Alternative models –Agonistic displays –Courtship –Begging Explanations for deceit.
Communication What is Communication? – An action on the part of one organism that alters the probability pattern of behavior in another organism in a.
ANIMAL BEHAVIOR Ch. 33. Ethology The study of animal behavior.
Guppy (Poecilia reticulata). Rapid evolution in guppies n When guppies coexist with large predatory fish, the guppies mature earlier at a smaller size,
Why would females choose “flashy”?. Gray tree frogs.
Chapter 9. The evolution of communication.. Hyena social behavior Hyenas live in social groups called clans. Clan members defend a territory and hunt.
Chapter 9 – Evolution of Communication
The Evolution of Communication Chapter 9 Or You did NOT just say that?
Chapter 10 Opener: The female (left) and the male (right) of the gorgeous lizard.
Measuring Evolution Evidence for evolution –Estimate natural selection in the wild –Trace fossils –Infer phylogeny from behavior –Infer behavioral evolution.
Evidence supporting theory of evolution
Chapter 12 Opener: Parental care is full of puzzles This brown booby allows (encourages?) its dominant offspring to kill a weaker sibling. Why?
The side-blotched lizard, Uta stansburiana, stretches from central Washington State in the north to parts of Mexico in the south. Although all the populations.
Behavioral Ecology Chapter 37. Nature vs. Nurture Behavior To what degree do our genes (nature) and environmental influences (nurture) affect behavior?
What do I do? I study behavior I look at an animal’s adaptations to its environment I study Evolution.
Animal Communication: Introduction and Evolutionary History ZOL 313 June 3, 2008.
Environmental signals Resource recruitment signals –Costs and benefits –Types –Examples Predator detection signals –Types –Examples.
Chapter 44 Table of Contents Section 1 Development of Behavior
Chapter 51: Behavioral Ecology
Chapter 51 Reading Quiz 1.What an animal does and how it does it is known as ____. 2.From what 2 main sources is behavior derived? 3.The full set of food-obtaining.
29.2 Animals in Their Environments
© Copyright all rights reserved Strange traits 2. Flashy males 1. Copulatory Suicide 4. Egg Mimics 3. Effeminate males.
Natural Selection Problem
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu To View the presentation as a slideshow with effects select “View”
1 Social Relations Chapter 7. 2 Introduction Behavioral Ecology: Interactions between organisms and the environment mediated by behavior. Sociobiology:
Social Relations Chapter 7.
1 What is the adaptive value of parental care?. 2 6/12/08: Parental care Lecture objectives: 1.Be able to apply a cost-benefit approach to the evolution.
Animal Behavior Chapter 45 Mader: Biology 8th Ed..
Speciation How do we get new species on Earth?. What is a species? Remember: A species is a group of organisms that can breed and produce viable and fertile.
Communication What is Communication? – An action on the part of one organism that alters the probability pattern of behavior in another organism in a.
The Evolution of Communication Chapter 9 Alcock (Animal Behavior) p p : not for exam Ethology & Behavioural Ecology Tom Wenseleers.
Communication Transfer of information from a signaler to a receiver (cooperative or non-cooperative?) Any physiological, morphological or behavioral display.
Animal Behavior Chapter 29. What is Behavior?? Behavior – observable and coordinated responses to environmental stimuli Genetic or Learned or Both???
INNATE BEHAVIOR CH. 31. I. BEHAVIOR A. Define Behavior 1. Anything an animal does in response to a stimulus. a.Example: Heat stimulates a lizard to seek.
Innate behaviours Territory, society, competition and co-operation.
Communication & The Evolution of Signals NSF GK12 Workshop: May 9, 2009 Nancy Burley Professor of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology University of California,
Animal Behavior Social Interactions in Ecosystems.
TYPES OF BEHAVIOR Section CATEGORIES OF ANIMAL BEHAVIOR 1.Foraging – locate, obtain, consume food 2.Migratory – move to a more suitable environment.
Chapter 6 Opener: The leafy sea dragon. 6.1 Mobbing behavior of colonial, ground-nesting gulls.
1 Approaches to the Study of Behavior __________can be defined as the way an organism responds to stimuli in its environment. Is behavior learned or genetic?
Evolution of Populations
Natural Selection Problem
Chapter 12 Opener: Parental care is full of puzzles.
Chapter 10 – Evolution of Reproductive Behavior
Evolution of Mating Systems Chapter 8. Mating Systems-Chapter 8 1 Monogamy 2 Polyandry 3 Polygyny And the many combinations within!
Reproduction Chapter 7. Sexual Selection Darwin's theory to explain traits that aren't obviously advantageous
An intended transfer of information from one organism to another. Purpose of communication: Location/position (food, sex, lost) Advertisement (quality.
Signal Costs and Constraints Signal detection theory (pp ) Costs to senders of signaling Constraints on senders Costs to receivers Constraints.
1 How is communication adaptive? 2 6/4/08: Animal Communication: Adaptationist perspective of communication Lecture objectives: 1.Be able to tell if.
Signal Evolution Process Sender preadaptations –Visual Intention movements Motivational conflicts Autonomic nervous system –Auditory –Chemical Receiver.
Unit 2 Lesson 6 Animal Behavior
Unit 2 Lesson 6 Animal Behavior
Other communication mechanisms for courtship
Allison Heschle Hannah Buchan Emily Grupe
Honest Signals.
Honest Signals.
ANIMAL SOCIAL BEHAVIORS
Animal Behaviour Part II
Other communication mechanisms for courtship
Chapter 8 Primate Behavior
An Evolutionary View of Behavior
Theory of Natural Selection
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 9 Opener: When a bull elk bugles, other males listen

9.1 The pseudopenis of the female spotted hyena can be erected

9.2 Concentrations of testosterone in male and female spotted hyenas (Part 1)

9.2 Concentrations of testosterone in male and female spotted hyenas (Part 2)

9.3 A cost of the pseudopenis for female spotted hyenas

9.4 Competition for food among spotted hyenas may favor highly aggressive individuals

9.5 Dominance greatly advances female reproductive success in the spotted hyena

9.6 Ultrasonic communication

9.7 Evolution of a sensory system

9.8 Arthropod gills have evolved into many different structures with different functions (Part 1)

9.8 Arthropod gills have evolved into many different structures with different functions (Part 2)

9.9 Evolutionary precursors of insect wings?

9.10 A surface-skimming stonefly

9.11 A possible evolutionary pathway from swimming to full flight in the stoneflies

9.12 An ancestral signal has been co-opted in some bowerbirds

9.13 Sensory exploitation and the evolution of a courtship signal in Neumania papillator

9.14 Two evolutionary scenarios for the evolution of male courtship trembling in Koenikea (Part 1)

9.14 Two evolutionary scenarios for the evolution of male courtship trembling in Koenikea (Part 2)

9.15 A female cichlid fish (left) is attracted to the anal fin of a male by the orange spots on the fin

9.16 Food, carotenoids, and female mate preferences in the guppy

9.17 Sexual preferences for orange spots match foraging preferences by female guppies

9.18 The response of least auklets to three novel artificial signals

9.19 Receivers can respond to an ancestral signal not present in their species

9.20 Sensory exploitation and swordtail phylogeny

9.21 Mate preferences for a novel ornament

9.22 The panda principle is evident in the sexual behavior of a parthenogenetic whiptail lizard

9.23 A group of ravens feeding on a carcass to which they were attracted by a yelling companion

9.24 Yelling is a recruitment signal

9.25 Predation risk has affected the evolution of begging calls in warblers (Part 1)

9.25 Predation risk has affected the evolution of begging calls in warblers (Part 2)

9.26 Testosterone affects begging rate and feeding rate in black-headed gull chicks

9.27 An honest signal of hunger?

9.28 The European cuckoo chick’s begging call matches that of four baby reed warblers (Part 1)

9.28 The European cuckoo chick’s begging call matches that of four baby reed warblers (Part 2)

9.29 The cuckoo’s begging calls stimulate more frequent feeding by its host parents

9.30 Illegitimate receivers can detect the signals of their prey (Part 1)

9.30 Illegitimate receivers can detect the signals of their prey (Part 2)

9.31 Great tit alarm calls

9.32 Hearing abilities of a predator and its prey

9.33 Convergent evolution in a signal

9.34 Deep croaks deter rivals

9.35 Threat displays are energetically demanding in the side-blotched lizard (Part 1)

9.35 Threat displays are energetically demanding in the side-blotched lizard (Part 2)

9.36 Convergent threat displays

9.37 Antler span in two New Guinean fly species provides accurate information about body size

9.38 An honest signal

9.39 A firefly femme fatale

9.40 A deceptive signaler