animal behavior Flashcards

1
Q

What type of stress response involves the adrenal medulla? What class of hormones is involved in each type of response?

A

-fight or flight response or short term stress
-hormone: amine hormones: epinephrine and norepinephrine

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2
Q

what type of stress response involves the adrenal cortex? what class of hormones is involved?

A

long term stress
-cortex: steroid hormones: glucocorticoids

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3
Q

What pathway regulates the fight or flight response? What hormones are involved?
What do they do?

A

Pathway: stress–>nerve cell in hypothalamus–>nerve signals–>spinal cord–>nerve cell–>adrenal cortex secretes hormones
Amine hormones: epinephrine and noprepinephrine
Effects of Epinephrine and norepinephrine:
1. increase blood glucose
2. increase blood pressure
3. increase breathing rate
4. increase blood flow to brain, heart, muscles
5. decrease digestive processes

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4
Q

What happens to “fight or flight” hormones in students before, during, and after an
exam?

A

Epinephrine and norepinephrine both peak on the day of the exam after showing a consistent elevation days before the exam and then returns to the baseline after successfully coping with the stressor (passing the exam)

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5
Q

Know the releasing hormones and anterior pituitary hormones involved in steroid
hormone release from the adrenal cortex. What is released from the adrenal cortex?
What does this hormone do?

A

*Example of tropic effect because release of another hormone
Releasing hormones: CRH
Anterior pituitary secretes: ACTH

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6
Q

What is the main glucocorticoid that is released in humans? What about birds and rats?

A

Adrenal cortex secretes: glucocorticoids
Effects of glucocorticoids:
1. Break down proteins and fats and convert to glucose (increase blood glucose)
2. Suppress immune system
3. Inhibit reproduction and growth

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7
Q

Describe how glucocorticoid release is regulated by negative feedback

A

the usefulness of negative feedback inhibition is that it works to keep hormone levels within a particular appropriate range

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8
Q

why is stress sometimes harmfull?

A
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9
Q

How is stress response adaptive? why is stress sometimes harmful?

A

-decreases investment in long term expensive projects (sperm and egg production)
- braking immune system
-increase alertness

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10
Q

how did the 3 main historical figures suggest birds should be studied?

A

interview an animal but in its own language

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11
Q

what are four questions asked by behavioral ecologists?

A

-what triggers the behavior?
-what genetic/ physiological mechanisms are involved?
-what is the role of experience?
- what is the evolutionary significance?

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12
Q

What is innate behavior? What is a fixed action pattern (FAP)? What is a sign stimulus?
What examples of each were discussed in class?

A

innate behavior: behavior that requires no learning
fixed action pattern: a sequence of unlearned, innate behaviors, once initiated usually carried to completion
example: chick pecking red dot on mothers beak

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13
Q

What experiments described in class have been used to identify sign stimuli?

A

sign stimulus: stimulus that initiates a FAP
-chick peaking real bird, fake with dot, and fake without dot(peaking decreased)

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14
Q

Sign stimuli can be sent through what sensory modalities (e.g., visual system, auditory
system…)?

A

sign stimuli can be visual, auditory, chemical, vibrations, tactile, electrical

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15
Q

can FAPs be shaped by learning?

A

yes

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16
Q

behavior results from a mix of what?

A

genes and environment

17
Q

what is involved in birdsong learning?

A

a mix of genetics and learning. they will sing correctly if the correct songs are heard

18
Q

Define the 3 mechanisms animals use to find locations in the environment. Which is the
simplest? Which is the most complex?

A

piloting: movement of animals from one familiar landmark to another
orientation: movement of animals along a compass line
navigation: ability of animals who can orient along compass lines to determine their location in relation to their destination

19
Q

What studies identified landmark use in animals (explain the wasp study from class)?

A

female wasp cant find her nest because the circle of leaves has been moved

20
Q

what are limitations associated with piloting?

A

requires familiarity
not useful at night or over the ocean
only works in landmarks are stationary

21
Q

What mechanism is used by monarch butterflies during migration?

A
22
Q

What does the internal clock have to do with one of these compasses?

A

has to know where the sun is based to know what direction to go to

23
Q

what does an animal need to navigate?

A
24
Q

what is a cognitive map? what are some cues on which the map can be based?

A

compass and starting point (map)

25
Q

Which mechanism of location finding allows an animal to correct its direction of travel if
it is displaced?

A

navigation

26
Q

what is communication?

A

the use of specifically designed signals to modify the behaviors of others

27
Q

How do bees symbolically communicate the location of food to other foragers?

A

they do the waggle dance which provided direction with respect to the sun and distance with the number and duration of waggles

28
Q

Explain the waggle dance. Be able to identify the location of food if you were presented
with a waggle dance and shown a figure (as in the waggle dance figure on your lecture
slide).

A

-if its body is facing up food is toward the sun
- if body is facing down food is away from the sun
if body is facing up but to an angle, food is facing the sun in that angle

29
Q

what are considered the primary functions of communication for most animals?

A

communication yo attract mates and to repel rivals

30
Q

what is the handicap principle?

A

if a male cannot produce a signal then they are not the highest quality male, these signals are expensive to produce

31
Q

what does testosterones have to do with the handicap principle?

A

testosterone mediates the handicap principle

32
Q

what is intersexual selection? what is Intrasexual selection?

A

intersexual: members of one sex (typically females) choose mates on the basis of particular characteristics
Intrasexual selection: involves competition among members of one sex (typically males) for mates

33
Q

how do intersexual and Intrasexual selection drive the evolution of elaborate male traits?

A

the best animals with the best traits to win get to mate causing their traits to carry on