L1 Flashcards
1
Q
What are proximate questions?
A
How do they do it?
- Causation (mechanism)
- Development (ontogeny)
2
Q
What are ultimate questions?
A
Why do they do it?
- Evolution (Phylogeny)
- Function (Selection)
3
Q
Ultimate causes can be explained by?
A
Fitness
4
Q
The levels of analysis
A
Refer to whether you’re studying ultimate or proximate causes and which aspects of these.
5
Q
what are the 4 steps in the scientific method?
A
- ask a question about an observed behaviour
- establish a hypothesis to potentially explain what has been seen
- set up predictions based on the hypothesis
- test these predictions by gathering appropriate data (field observations, experiments etc)
6
Q
Eusociality
A
- Few individuals reproduce
- Others gather food, defend colony etc
7
Q
Four subfamilies of Apidae:
A
Apinae
Bombinae
Meliponinae
- all eusocial
Euglossianiae are not eusocial
8
Q
Apinae and Meliponinae form swarms
A
- Old queen flies away and takes some worker bees
- Attaches itself to branches etc, whilst scout bees hunt for new area to live
- Split into two colonies
- Bumblebees and orchid bees dont form swarms
Nectar transfer
The apinae and meliponinae transfer nectar between individual
Nectar transfer in honey bees
9
Q
When during evolutionary history did these behaviours arise?
A
- Phylogenies not entirely known
- Probably apidae phylogeny
- Indicates one origin of eusociality
- Eusociality may have evolved several times
- Phylogeny indicates two origins of swarming
- Two origins of nectar transfer (once in honeybees and once in stingless bees)
- Paradox that evolution tends to work in the simplest way possible
10
Q
Bumblebees broke off before honeybees split?
A
- One origin of eusociality
- One origin of swarming
One origin of nectar transfer
- One origin of swarming