8.1: Behaviors Flashcards
How do behaviours in animals arise? (2)
- Animal behaviour are innate, genetically hardwired
or learned through experience - Behaviour is shaped by natural selection as they increase an organism’s fitness
What are the purposes for behaviour? (3)
- finding food (foraging)
- wooing mates
- fighting of rivals (competitors)
Essentially survival and reproduction
In the 1970s, scientists won the Nobel Peace Prize in Physiology for their discoveries concerning organization and elicitation of ___ and ____ behaviour patterns. These studies developed the discipline of ______.
- individual and social
- ethology
What is ethology?
- The study of how evolutionary processes shape inherited behaviours and the ways that animals respond to specific stimuli
What is the definition of behaviour?
- an animal’s response to a stimulus (internal or external)
What is behaviour influenced by? What does it allow for? (3)
- nature vs nurture (genetic and environmental factors)
- allows for survival and reproduction
—> subject to natural selection
What is the definition of proximate cause?
- how a behaviour occurs, or how it is modified
What questions can you ask yourself to determine a proximate cause? (3)
- what was the stimulus to cause the behaviour?
- how does the nurture component affect behaviour?
- how do the experiences during growth and development influence the response?
What is the definition of an ultimate cause?
- why a behaviour occurs (in context of natural selection]
What are questions you can ask yourself to determine the ultimate cause? (3)
- How does the behaviour help the animal survive and reproduce?
- How does the nature component affect behaviour?
- what is the evolutionary basis of the behaviour?
Practice: zebras put themselves at risk to drink water at a watering hole. Some zebras may stay off to the side while the others drink. If one of them makes a warning call, the zebras at the watering hole will run away. Determine the proximate and ultimate cause.
Proximate: the warning call triggers the zebra to run away from the watering hole
Ultimate: running away when hearing the call increases their chance of survival
Behaviours can either be ____ or ____
- innate (in born)
- learned
What is an innate behaviour? (3)
- developmentally fixed
- Hereditary, born behaviors, do not need to learn them; instinctive
- experience during growth has no obvious effect
What is a learned behaviour? What does it result in?(3)
- Depend on environmental Influence
- Experiences Do affect these behaviors
- High variation in a population.
Behaviours can lean one way more, but many behaviours have both components of?
Innate and learned