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Animal Behavior
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Feeding Behaviors - Predation
Adaptations powerful jaws for gripping prey large, sharp canine teeth for tearing prey powerful forelimbs for gripping/killing prey claws for gripping prey
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Feeding Behaviors - Predation
Adaptations eyes oriented forward for binocular vision/depth perception acute hearing acute sense of smell echolocation heat sensors
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Feeding Behaviors - Predation
Hunting techniques ambush – lie in wait for prey to approach, depends on camouflage, surprise stalk – approach with stealth, short-range attack chase – depends on speed, surprise, endurance, or teamwork poison/immobilize
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Feeding Behaviors - Herbivores
Adaptations- mouthparts a. specialized for cutting (incisors) and grinding (molars) plants b. teeth of most herbivores grow continually. c. rodents & grazing herbivores - large toothless gap between incisors and molars for manipulating food w/ tongue. d. specialized bacteria in gut to digest cellulose.
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Feeding Behaviors - Herbivores
Feeding Strategies 1. Grazing - grasses, low-growing herbs 2. Browsers – leaves, twigs, bark of woody plants
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Feeding Behaviors - Herbivores
Feeding Strategies 3. Seed-eaters – eat seeds and nuts 4. Fruit eaters – fruit, berries
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Feeding Behaviors - Herbivores
Defenses – herbivores are prey eyes oriented to the side for greater field of view acute hearing acute sense of smell
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Feeding Behaviors - Herbivores
Defenses – herbivores are prey Large size Fast, agile runners flight poisonous/distasteful
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Feeding Behaviors - Omnivores
eat combination of plants and animals Hybrid dental pattern between carnivores & herbivores
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Feeding Behaviors - Scavengers
Eat dead animals. larger scavengers open carcasses for smaller scavengers and break it into smaller pieces for decomposers. Adaptations – great sense of smell
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