animal behavior Flashcards
What type of stress response involves the adrenal medulla? What class of hormones is involved in each type of response?
-fight or flight response or short term stress
-hormone: amine hormones: epinephrine and norepinephrine
what type of stress response involves the adrenal cortex? what class of hormones is involved?
long term stress
-cortex: steroid hormones: glucocorticoids
What pathway regulates the fight or flight response? What hormones are involved?
What do they do?
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
What happens to “fight or flight” hormones in students before, during, and after an
exam?
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)
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?
*Example of tropic effect because release of another hormone
Releasing hormones: CRH
Anterior pituitary secretes: ACTH
What is the main glucocorticoid that is released in humans? What about birds and rats?
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
Describe how glucocorticoid release is regulated by negative feedback
the usefulness of negative feedback inhibition is that it works to keep hormone levels within a particular appropriate range
why is stress sometimes harmfull?
How is stress response adaptive? why is stress sometimes harmful?
-decreases investment in long term expensive projects (sperm and egg production)
- braking immune system
-increase alertness
how did the 3 main historical figures suggest birds should be studied?
interview an animal but in its own language
what are four questions asked by behavioral ecologists?
-what triggers the behavior?
-what genetic/ physiological mechanisms are involved?
-what is the role of experience?
- what is the evolutionary significance?
What is innate behavior? What is a fixed action pattern (FAP)? What is a sign stimulus?
What examples of each were discussed in class?
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
What experiments described in class have been used to identify sign stimuli?
sign stimulus: stimulus that initiates a FAP
-chick peaking real bird, fake with dot, and fake without dot(peaking decreased)
Sign stimuli can be sent through what sensory modalities (e.g., visual system, auditory
system…)?
sign stimuli can be visual, auditory, chemical, vibrations, tactile, electrical
can FAPs be shaped by learning?
yes