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Animal Behavior Mrs. Rightler
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Methods of Study Comparative psychology Ethology Behavioral ecology Sociobiology
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Instinct Basic set of behaviors present at birth May need a trigger Behavior improves or changes with experience
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Maturation Behavior seen after a period of development has occurred Improvement or change not based on experience but on time Ex. Tadpole swimming techniques
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Imprinting Konrad Lorenz Critical time period ONLY Young animal develops attachment to another animal or object Rapid learning
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Learning
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Habituation Animal trained to ignore stimuli Dog examples
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Classical Conditioning Pavlov’s dog Animal learns to respond to particular stimuli Basic obedience training
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Instrumental Conditioning Trial-and-error learning Skinner Box Behavior can be “shaped”
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Latent Learning Exploratory learning No obvious reward Helps animal learn about its surroundings
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Insight Learning Animal uses experiences and thinking to solve problems. Tool use Primates
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Behavior is Controlled by: Nervous system Endocrine system – Organizational effects – Activational effects
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Animal Communication Transfer of information from one animal to the other (both must be mutually adapted) Visual Auditory Tacticle Chemical
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Behavioral Ecology
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Habitat Selection Two factors influence habitat choice – Physiological – Psychological
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Finding Food
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Foraging Behavior Process of locating food resources Cost vs. benefit analysis – Handling time – Nutritional value – Status value – Concentration/density
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Specialists vs. Generalist
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Social Behavior Members of the same species Usually live full-time in groups Can refer to predator-prey interactions
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Group Living Animal society – stable group of individuals of the same species that have cooperative relationships outside of mating and raising young. Invertebrates and vertebrates
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Advantages to Group Life Protection from predators Increase feeding efficiency Protection from elements Easy access to potential mates
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Mating Behavior
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Disadvantages of Group Life Competition for resources Diseases Parasites
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Aggression Agonistic behavior Attacks Threat displays Maintains territory Maintains dominance hierarchy
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Altruism Individual sacrifices reproductive potential for the benefit of others in the group – Honeybees – Turkeys – Naked mole rats Kin selection
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