Transcript
Page 1: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

1

Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do?

Picture: Animal cognition.net

Page 2: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

2

Aristotle (384-322 B.C.): Observational work in zoology

Embryology

Anatomy

Characteristics: Vivipary

Behavior: Social organization

Page 3: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

3

5/13/08: Natural Selection and History of Animal Behavior

Lecture objectives:

1. Understand Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection

2. Identify the major people and questions that guided the development of the modern study of animal behavior

Page 4: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

4

The views on relationships between species have progressed over time

Page 5: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

5

Darwin set the stage for the study of animal behavior through his theory of natural selection

Page 6: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

6

Evolution by natural selection is inevitable if 3 conditions are met:

1. Variation:

2. Heredity:

3. Differences in reproductive success:xxSurvival of the “fittest”

Page 8: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

8

Example of natural selection in action: moths in England during the Industrial Revolution

I tawt I taw a peppered

moth!

Brown trunks increase

Proportion of light moths

0

1

Page 9: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

9

What would a population look like over timeif one of Darwin’s 3 conditions is not met?

1. No Variation?

2. No Heredity?

3. No Differences in reproductive success?

Page 10: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

10

Biologists often seek to understand behavior through the lens of natural selection

“How does this trait promote reproductive success?”Logic:

Conditions of n.s. apply to

So species have been

So the traits we observe today are a

So these traits probably exist because

Page 11: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

11

Example of Darwinian approach: How does infanticide by male langurs increase the male’s reproductive success?

x x

Tendency for infanticide

No tendency for infanticide

Page 12: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

12

Example of Darwinian approach: Why might a (former) mother langur be willing to mate with this new male?

x

Tendency to mate

No tendency to mate

x

Page 13: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

13

How might building an elaborate bower enhance the reproductive success of male bowerbirds?

Page 21: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

21

Behaviorist or Ethologist? You decide!

“Give me a dozen healthy infants…and my own specified world to bring them up in and I'll guarantee to take any one at random and train him to become any type of specialist I might select – doctor, lawyer, artist, merchant-chief and, yes, even beggar-man and thief, regardless of his talents, penchants, tendencies, abilities, vocations, and race of his ancestors.”

?

Page 22: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

22

Behaviorist or Ethologist? You decide!

His view: Each animal has its own subjective universe, or way of sensing the world around it. And as a consequence, different animals, even ones that share the same physical environment, might have unique sensory experiences.

?

Page 23: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

23

The history of the study of animal behavior

Aristotle Darwin

PavlovThorndike

Skinner

Lorenzvon FrischTinbergen

Behaviorism

Ethology

ModernAnimal

Behavior

1900

1973

Nobel Prize

350 B.C. 1859

ComparativePsychology

Page 24: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

24

The modern study of animal behavior is a synthesis of behaviorism and ethology

Behaviorists came to recognize that

Ethologists came to recognize that

Page 26: 1 Animal Behavior: Why (and how) do animals do what they do? Picture: Animal cognition.net

26

Darwin discussion

1. Variation: What might maintain this?

2. Heredity: Are all traits hereditary?

3. Differences in reproductive success:

What might make some animals be less successful at producing offspring?

xx


Recommended