Created by J yadonknow
over 6 years ago
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Question | Answer |
Tinberg's 4 "why" questions | Causation (mech) Ontogeny (Devo) Function (adaptive advantage) Phylogeny (evo history) |
Why do birds sing at dawn? Causation | Daylight/hormones/rival song/syrinx |
Ontogeny | Song learning, development of larynx |
Function | Attracting a mate, territory defence |
Phylogeny | Shared descent/ecology |
Pitfall of studying behaviour | Anthropomorphism |
Info provided by communication | Aggression Identity Social-info |
Communication definition | Passing of info from sender to receiver |
Signal definition | Feature of an animal that's evolved to alter behaviour of the receivers |
Cues definition | Any feature that can be used as a guide for future actions |
How do signals evolve? | Probably by ritualisation of existing cues |
Cue revealing autonomic stimulation | Respiration - operculum flapping |
Ritualisation of cues revealing behaviour | Intention movements - fight/flight Self-protective movements - Scalp retraction in primates |
"Displacement" behaviour | Interruption of one behaviour with another seemingly irrelevant behaviour |
How ritualised signals differ from cues (4) | 1. Conspicuousness 2. Redundancy (e.g. repetition) 3. Stereotype. 4. Altering components |
How ritualisation aids communication | 1. ^ cost = cost ensures honesty 2. ^ Efficacy = ^ info transfer speed 3. ^ ability of signallers to manipulate receivers |
Signal evolution | Evolve to maximise transmission and minimise eavesdropping Predators drive selection for private frequencies |
Uses of signalling | Signal danger Communicate w/ predator |
Aposematism | Conspicuous warning of unprofitability |
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