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Published byRebecca Norton Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 3 Opener: Sanderling growth & behavioral development depend on genes & environment
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3.1 Development of worker behavior in honey bees
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3.2 Gene activity varies in the brains of nurse bees and foragers
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3.3 Social environment and task specialization by worker honey bees
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3.4 Levels of the messenger RNA produced when the for gene is expressed
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3.5 Imprinting in greylag geese
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3.6 Cross-fostering has different imprinting effects in two related songbirds
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3.7 Spatial learning by chickadees
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3.8 A Clark’s nutcracker holding a seed in its bill that the bird is about to cache underground
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3.9 Differences within a species in learned behavior
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3.10 Nests of Polistes paper wasps contain odors that adhere to the bodies of the wasps
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3.11 Kin discrimination in Belding’s ground squirrels
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3.12 Evidence for the ability of Belding’s ground squirrels to learn their own odor
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3.13 Different wintering sites of blackcap warblers
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3.14 Funnel cage for recording the migratory orientation of captive birds
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3.15 Differences in the migratory behavior of two closely related birds
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3.16 Why do people differ in their test scores? (Part 1)
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3.16 Why do people differ in their test scores? (Part 2)
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3.17 A single gene affects maternal behavior in laboratory mice
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3.18 Social amnesia is related to the loss of a single gene
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3.19 Genetic differences cause behavioral differences in fruit fly larvae (Part 1)
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3.19 Genetic differences cause behavioral differences in fruit fly larvae (Part 2)
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3.20 A coastal Californian garter snake about to consume a banana slug
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3.21 Response of newborn, naive garter snakes to slug cubes
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3.22 A tongue-flicking newborn garter snake senses odors from a cotton swab
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3.23 Density effects on the foraging behavior of fruit fly larvae
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3.24 Response to artificial selection on nest-building behavior by mice
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3.25 Response to artificial selection on the fall migration departure date of blackcap warblers
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3.26 Dogs are especially sensitive to signals from human beings
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3.27 Surrogate mothers used in social deprivation experiments
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3.28 Socially isolated rhesus infants
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3.29 Developmental homeostasis in humans (Part 1)
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3.29 Developmental homeostasis in humans (Part 2)
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3.30 Facial symmetry and attractiveness
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3.31 Testing mate choice in a female wolf spider
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3.32 Developmental switch mechanisms can produce polyphenisms within the same species
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3.33 Tiger salamanders occur in two forms
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3.34 Activity of the gene that codes for gonadotropin-releasing hormone in Haplochromis burtoni
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3.35 Male thynnine wasps can be deceived into “mating” with a flower
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3.36 Male thynnine wasps can learn to avoid being deceived by an orchid
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3.37 Spatial learning abilities differ among members of the crow family (Part 1)
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3.37 Spatial learning abilities differ among members of the crow family (Part 2)
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3.38 Sex differences in spatial learning ability are linked to home range size
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3.39 A virtual maze used for computer-based studies of navigational skills
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3.40 Sex differences in the hippocampus
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3.41 Operant conditioning exhibited by a rat in a Skinner box
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3.42 Biased learning
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3.43 Biases in taste aversion learning
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3.44 Vampire bats cannot form learned taste aversions
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