Species- Characteristic Behaviour= Shown by
all members of a species
Individual- Characteristic
Behaviour=Varies from
one individual to another
Why?
Survival
Food
Territories
Predators
Mate
Reproduce
Keywords
Physiology=Mechanisms of
behaviour (Functioning of
Nervous system)
Psychology=Mechanism of the mind
(Factors which effect development)
Behaviour= The action an animal
undertakes as a consequence of internal
or external factors.
Ethology= Study of animal behaviour
Instinct= An inborn pattern of behaviour that is characteristics of a
species and is often a response to specific environmental stimuli.
Learnt= Something that is learnt from their parents.
Phobia=An extreme or irrational
fear of or aversion to something.
Simple non- association learning= This is where an animals behaviour
changes in the absence of an associated stimulus
Habituation= Animal learns that there is no need to react to a certain
stimulus= reacts less or not at all (Scare crow)
Failure to respond to stimuli runs the risk of being killed.
Sensitisation= Increase in the strength of response to a stimulus across repeated
presentations (Lioness may eat quicker when she sees a male)
Behaviourists
Darwin
The origin of species
Natural Selection/ Survival of the fittest
Evolutionary mechanisms had shaped
human anatomy and 'mental faculties'
Pavlov
Classical conditioning= Association
between 2 stimuli through reinforcement
Conditioned Stimulus= A stimulus that at first fails to get a
particular response, but will then complete the response once
presented with the unconditioned response.
Unconditioned Stimulus= A stimulus that gets a
vigorous response without training the animal
Test= Dog shown food= Dog Salivates (Unconditioned Stimulus and Response),
Bell Ring= No reaction ( No conditioned response), Bell+Food= Dog Salivates
(Unconditioned Response), Bell rings= Dog salivates ( Conditioned Stimulus and
Response)
Tinbergen
4 Questions:
Function: How does the behaviour impact on the
animals chances of survival and reproduction?
Evolution: How does the behaviour compare with similar behaviours in related
species,and how might it have arisen through the process of phylogeny?
Causation: What are the stimuli that elicit the response
and how has it been modified by recent learning?
Development: How does the behaviour change with age, and what
early experiences are necessary for the behaviour to be shown?
EXperiment
How do beewolves find their way home?
Females when leaving the nest, cover it with sand, Tinbergen
set up landmarks around the nest. He then moved the
landmarks. Wasp searched where landmarks were.
Skinner
Operant Conditioning= Association between animals
own behaviour and an outcome (trial and error)
Skinners Box (Rat)
Positive
Reinforcement= Add
something which
makes the behaviour
more likely to happen
(Treats)
Positive Punishment= Add
something which makes
the behaviour less likely to
happen (Squirt with water)
Negative Reinforcement= Take something
away, behaviour more likely to happen (Stop
squirting dog)
Negative Punishment=
Take away something,
behaviour less likely to
happen (Takeaway
treats)
Lorenz
Imprinting
1. Occurs during a specific time (Species specific) 2. Is
irreversible 3. Establishes an individuals amimals preference for a
certain species. 4. Some behaviour is affected by imprinting more
than others. 5. Stressful stimuli strengthen imprinting.
Experiment
Split a clutch of eggs, half got raised by mother,
the rest were incubated and saw Konrad on
hatching. The incubated group imprinted on
Konrads wellies.
Mating Systems
Monogamy= one male, one female
Mate guarding hypothesis= If female is
receptive after mating, male will guard his
female (Clown Shrimp)
Male Assistance Hypothesis= If male remains with female to give parental
care then offspring are more likely to survive (Seahorse)
Female Enforced Hypothesis= Females prevent
males obtaining extra mates
Extra- pair copulation= Sneeky sex
Males Benefit= Get his genes around
Female Benefits= Increased chance of
fertility (Adders)
Polgyny= One male with 2+ Females (Crocodile, Lions)
Resources Defence= Male defends resources (African Chidid)
Classic= Females lay clutches of for multiple males
and compete for males (Jocanas)
Co-operative= Two or more males cooperate to assist a
female at one nest (Acorn Woodpecker)
Polygyandry= 2+ females form
binds with 2+ males (Ostriches)
Motivation and Coping
Motivation= A reason or reasons for
acting or behaving in a particular way.
Primary= Usually goal orientated, usually
caused by a sensory stimuli (for survival)
Secondary= Can be learned, so elicits more
complex behaviour (not immediate for survival)
Coping= Implies having control of mental and bodily stability and prolonged
failure to cope results in failure to grow, reproduce and may lead to death.
Reactive= After the onset of stress.
Behavioural actions to cope.
Stereotypic and abnormal behaviour.
Stereotypic= Repetative and has no purpose (way of coping)
More externally motivated
React more strongly to environmental stimuli
Therefore are more flexible in their behaviour.
Proactive= Characterised by an automonous (independant) response. Try to
limit the severity and duration
More vulnerable to sterotypies. More intrinsically driven ie-
their behaviour is less guided by environmental stimuli but
more by internal mechanisms.
With repeated experience, proactive
animals easily develop rountines.
Tonic Immobility= Animal Freezes.
Testing
Avoidance= Fear aggrevated test used to evaluate learning
and memory in rodents of CUS disorders. Subjects learn to
avoid an environment with a adversive stimulus (foot shock)
Preference= Measure the motivational priorities in animals.
More than one choice is offered- clear view of what is
behaviourally/biologically important to the animals.
Groups
Positives
Increased vigilance,
Better use and defence
of limited resources,
Increased reproductive
efficiency.
Negatives
Increased
conspicousness,
Cannabalism.
Disease spread more
Dilution effect= When all look the same/sound the same
can spread out and confuse predator (Zebra)
Selfish her effect= While one animal is getting
eaten the rest can get away (Penguins)
Co-operative Hunting (Chimps)
Positives
Can get prey, you wouldn't
normally get (larger)
Negatives
Have to share it.
Energy Cost.
Injury.
Hierarchy
Despotic= 1 individual animal
dominant, while other are
submissive (Wolves)
Linear= Each individual dominates all other below
him but not those above (Chickens)
Positives
Enhances reproductive success,
Increased access to food.
Optimality Theory= An idea of how an animal chooses
a specific behavioural choice that has minimum costs.
Cost and Benefits
3 Components
Assumption of the choices
of facing the animal
Assumption of the benefits/what can be
maximised (rate of energy gain)
Assumption of the constraints/limiting factors (distance, time)
Optimal behaviour= Maximising lifetime fitness,
Benefits outway costs. Increasing your ability to
reproduce and pass on genes.
Co-operative and Alturism
Co-operative behaviour= When an animal work with
another to achieve a mutual goal. Can be between same
or different species. (Monkeys grooming)
Benefits
Increased Vigilance, Better
use of resources, Increased
reproductive efficiency
(Meerkat nanny)
Costs
Competition of resources,
Susceptibility to disease,
Conspicuousness
Alturism= Extreme co-operation (selfless)
Sacrafice
Kin Selection= Alrturistic acts happen more
often in animals related. (Belding ground
Squirrels)
Reciprocal Alturism= Recipients
repay alturistic behaviour in the
future. (Vampire Bats)
Eusociality= Do not reproduce instead they act as
helpers to parents (Bees, Ants, Naked mole Rats)
Overlap in generations, Co-operative brood,
Specialist casts of non-reproductive individuals.
Recipient + Actor Benefits= Co-operative, Actor
Harmed + Recipient Benefits= Alturistic,
Recipient Harmed + Actor Benefits= Selfish,
Actor + Recipient Harmed= Spiteful
Territorality= Term how animals use
space to communicate, ownership,
occupancy of space and posessions
Costs= Energy
expense, Risk
of injury, Loss
of territory,
Loss of mate
Weighing up costs= Distribution of resources in space,
Distribution of resources in time, Intruder pressure,
Environmental conditions will alter economic
defendability and therefore territory size.
Inruders: The winner of disputes about territories related to:
Size, State, The resources they are defending.
Sometimes lose: Might be a younger male, one who has
territory already is already often the biggest & the best
No Territory
Satellite= Orbit around a group of animals
the same species and share resources
Benefits= Females may be
attracted to larger groups of males
so satellites make up numbers.
Satellites may fend off intruders.
Why display with rivals?
Hotspot= Lekks occur where the chances
of females is high eg. daily routes
Hotshot= Subordinate males cluster
around attractive males to sneak
Female Preference= Like to
compare and make a choice.
Defence Strategies
3 Types: Hide, Run Away, Fight Back increasing
time cost <-> Increasing energy cost
Trade off between time and energy which
determines the tactic to choose at a specific time
Primary- Behaviours that reduce the probability of an individual being attacked by a
predator (Camouflage, Run away, Counter Shading) eg. Gazelle, Jungle Nymph
Secondary= Behaviours which lessen the chance that an attack will be
successful (Drop tail, Play dead) eg. Possum, Hawk Moth Caterpillar
Counter Shading= Belly is light in colouration, back is darker in colour (Penguin, Squirrel)
Disruptive Colouration=
(Zebra, Leopard)
Aposematism= Bright
colours (Toxic, Taste)
Mullerian Mimicry= Animals using the
same strategy of defence
Batesian Mimcry= Animal looks like another which is
dangerous (Milk Snake, Coral Snake)