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Today is Tuesday, September 23 rd , 2014

In This Lesson: Unit 2 Animal Behavior (Lesson 1 of 3). Today is Tuesday, September 23 rd , 2014. Pre-Class: What are those ants doing? I know it’s a little hard to see, but really, why would ants pile onto each other like that…especially with nothing supporting them?

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Today is Tuesday, September 23 rd , 2014

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  1. In This Lesson: Unit 2 Animal Behavior (Lesson 1 of 3) Today is Tuesday,September 23rd, 2014 Pre-Class: What are those ants doing? I know it’s a little hard to see, but really, why would ants pile onto each other like that…especially with nothing supporting them? Also, get a paper towel for you/your partner.

  2. Today’s Agenda • Behavioral manifestations of evolution. • Where is this in my book? • Chapter 51.

  3. By the end of the lesson… • You should be able to distinguish between proximate and ultimate perspectives when analyzing behavior. • You should be able to separate innate behaviors from learned behaviors, and taxis from kinesis. • You should be able to describe social behaviors, including examples.

  4. Quick Heads-Up • Just a quick note to let you know that we’ll be interrupting these notes to do our Animal Behavior lab (Investigation 12) and to learn Chi-Squared data analyses.

  5. Before we start… • Challenge questions!

  6. The first thing you need to know… • Let’s be honest: You’ll never know exactly what it’s like to be your dog, for example. • So, when people talk for their dog, or even just feel a need to ascribe human emotions/thoughts to them, they’re anthropomorphizing. • Anthropomorphosis is the ascription of human behavior to animals. It’s wrong. Don’t do it.

  7. Think this dolphin is smiling? http://www.marineland.net/images/DolphinHeader.jpg

  8. Think this gorilla is sad? http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b1/Eyes_of_gorilla.jpg

  9. Think this bluebird is angry? http://www.songbirdgarden.com/store/ProdImages/EK6600-1.jpg

  10. Then you’re anthropomorphizing!

  11. The second thing you need to know… • Just like Mendelian geneticists studies the phenotypes that emerge from a certain genotype, behaviorists study thebehavioral phenotypes that emerge from those same genotypes. • Just like other traits, behaviors that improve successful reproduction chances will also be selected for. • That ended in a preposition and I have no idea how to fix it.

  12. The Basic Behavior • Before we even define behavior, let’s take a quick look at the most basic behavior out there: movement. • Movement is often a simple response to a stimulus. We call it either taxisor kinesis. • Taxis is a directional response, like how a trout will turn itself so that it’s facing upstream to catch food as it drifts downstream. • Kinesis, on the other hand, is non-directional movement. • It’s still in response to a stimulus, just not directed. • Woodlice, for a common example, move less when humidity goes up. Non-directional.

  13. Taxis or Kinesis? • A photosynthetic microorganism swims toward the light side of its petri dish. • Taxis (phototaxis) • Ants exit their colony and wander in search of food. • Kinesis • Once food is found, other ants follow the trail of pheromones to the first ant. • Taxis (chemotaxis) • Pillbugs under a recently overturned log run for darkness. • Taxis (phototaxis)

  14. With that in mind… • Behavior is quite simply anything an animal does in response to a stimulus from its environment. • A stimulus is simply a “cue,” which could be internal or external. • An internal stimulus might be hunger. • An external stimulus might be a baseball thrown at your face. • These behaviors can be broken down into two general categories: • Innate behaviors are those with which an animal is born. They are automaticand do not depend on experience. • Learned behaviors emerge during an animal’s lifetime. They are variable (they change) and depend on the present stimuli of the environment.

  15. Innate vs. Learned • Mother birds will feed, almost uncontrollably, the gaping beak of a nestling bird. • They just do it… • …even if the image is printed on a piece of paper. • However, a learned behavior is something that can often be trained. • Dog house-breaking, for example. • More on this later. http://britishwildlifehelpline.com/Chicks.JPG

  16. Nature vs. Nurture • All of this hints at the age-old debate of nature vs. nurture. • Is it something genetic, or is it learned? • Homosexuality is, unfortunately, often brought up in this context. • To that end: • Nurture: Male migratory birds kept in an outdoor aviary in view of their migrating (free) male counterparts will begin to exhibit homosexual behaviors like allopreening (basically cuddling and grooming). • Nature: Removing a particular gene in male fruit flies causes them to attempt to mate with other males.

  17. You observe a singing songbird: • What can you ask about the behaviors observed? You might ask… • How does the bird sing? • What prompts the singing? • Why does the bird sing? • Ask Maya Angelou that one. • Numbers 1-2 are proximate questions. They concern the present or near past. • Number 3 is an ultimate question. It concerns the evolutionary history of the bird.

  18. Proximate vs. Ultimate • Proximate or Ultimate? • How does photoperiod (day length) affect breeding in cranes? • Proximate. It’s a “small picture” sort of question. • Why do cranes perform a courtship dance? • Ultimate. It’s asking about something that must have taken generations to evolve. • Why do cranes breed in spring? • Ultimate. It’s the “big picture” evolutionary question.

  19. Expanding the debate… • Niko Tinbergen proposed the following “four questions” of animal behavior. • Let’s use singing songbirds as an example again:

  20. Four Questions of Animal BehaviorCase in Point • BBC – Vogelkop Bowerbird

  21. The Study of Behavior • Let’s take a look at the history of ethology, which is a fancy word for the study of behavior, in biology. • At some point we needed to get to the typical cast of old white guys in biology. • The Big Names: • B.F. Skinner • Ivan Pavlov • Karl von Frisch • Konrad Lorenz

  22. B.F. Skinner: Operant Conditioning • Creator of the Skinner box. • Sounds violent. • A mouse learns that when it pushes a lever, it gets a reward – positive reinforcement. • Learned behavior, obviously. • If the mouse doesn’t push the lever, it may receive an electric shock. • So operant conditioning is training to associate a voluntary behavior with a certain response. • Operant conditioning has a large share of trial-and-error learning as the mouse must learn about the lever’s function by simply trying it.

  23. Operant Conditioning Words • Reinforcement: A reward. • Positive Reinforcement: Giving you something good. • Example: A cookie! • Negative Reinforcement: Taking away something bad. • Example: If I play a screeching loud sound until you do something I want. • Punishment: A change that decreases the likelihood of a certain behavior continuing. • Example: An electric shock.

  24. Operant Conditioning Demo • I needs me a volunteer. • This volunteer will have to exit the room briefly. • When s/he returns, s/he will have to guess the desired behavior determined by the class by doing different things in order to get rewards. • This is often termed “clicker training” because trainers will make a click sound when the desired behavior is performed, thus edging into a different kind of conditioning.

  25. Ivan Pavlov: Classical Conditioning • Give a dog some food and it’ll salivate automatically. • An innate, unconditioned behavior. • Ring a bell near a dog and it probably won’t care for more than a second or two. • Ring a bell and give a dog food enough times, however, and the dog begins to associate the bell with food. • Suddenly, you can simply ring a bell and get a dog to salivate. • That’s a learned, conditioned response. • So, classical conditioning is pairing an innate behavior with a neutral stimulus.

  26. Operant vs. Classical Conditioning • TED: Peggy Andover – The Difference Between Operant and Classical Conditioning

  27. Learning • Another principle in learning is habituation/sensitization. • Habituation is when the response to a stimulus decreases with exposure to that stimulus. • “The Boy Who Cried Wolf” phenomenon, minus the actual wolf at the end. http://www.kcet.org/news/rewire/assets_c/2013/10/owl-pigeon-10-25-13-thumb-600x600-62607.jpg

  28. Learning • Sensitization, on the other hand, is the opposite. • Suppose every 30 seconds you don’t do a behavior I want, I turn on a red light, then deliver a small electric shock. • Soon, the sight of a red light may be such a powerful stimulus that it almost seems to cause pain anyway! • Sensitization is an increased response to a stimulus.

  29. Learning • One last example of learned behavior: tool use. • Using tools is NOT an innate behavior. Individuals need to learn to use them by trial-and-error or from other individuals. • Tool use was originally considered a primate-only thing, until… • New Caledonian Crow video!

  30. Just kidding! • Here’s the real last example: • The Big Bang Theory

  31. Conditioning • What do the works of Pavlov and Skinner have in common? • They both concern learned behaviors. • Collectively, they form what’s known as associative learning– the pairing of stimuli with actions. • Lorenz and von Frisch spent their time more with innate behaviors. • Lorenz: Birds. • Von Frisch: Bees. • Before I tell you a little story about the birds and the bees, I need to tell you about the fixed action pattern. • And before that I need to tell you about the chi-squared test. And other stuff.

  32. Fixed Action Pattern • The Fixed Action Pattern (FAP) is like the holy grail of innate behaviors. • FAPs are so deeply rooted that they are automatic behaviors that must be completed once started. • Case in Point: Niko Tinbergen’s Sticklebacks.

  33. Stickleback FAPs • Male sticklebacks are highly territorial. • Introduce a sign stimulus into their territory and they will react predictably. • A sign stimulus is a simplified version of a more complicated stimulus. • Putting a slender oval model, made of wood, that has a red “half” is the only stimulus needed to communicate an intruding male to the stickleback. • The stickleback will attack the model.

  34. Stickleback FAPs • If, instead, that sign stimulus is slightly…uh…distended, and has a greenish belly, it presents to the stickleback as a female. • The stickleback will court the model. • A lot like what we mentioned before – momma birds instinctively feeding the shape of a gaped nestling beak.

  35. Other Fixed Action Patterns • Egg Rolling • Greylag Geese • Move an egg out of Mother Goose’s nest and she’ll instinctively roll it back. • Remove the egg while she’s rolling it and she’ll keep making the rolling motion, even without the egg. • After she completes the FAP, she’ll look for the egg again, but she can’t stop the behavior once started. • Video!

  36. Other Fixed Action Patterns:Humans • Yawning: • Once started, a yawn cannot be stopped. Further, reading the word yawn, hearing a yawn, or seeing someone yawn may induce a yawn FAP. • Eyebrow Flashing: • Upon seeing someone familiar, humans often quickly raise and lower their eyebrows. It’s an involuntary reaction to someone familiar.

  37. The Supernormal Stimulus • A supernormal stimulus is one that is exaggerated beyond natural occurrence. • Examples: • Mother birds that feed models with the reddest and widest beaks. • Lipstick in humans being even more attractive than realistically red lips (?). • Birds that prefer to incubate the largest and most gray-speckled eggs (Tinbergen again). http://obsidianwings.blogs.com/.a/6a00d834515c2369e2017eea7923fc970d-pi Soler, M., Martinez, J. G., Soler, J. J., & Møller, A. P. (1995). Preferential allocation of food by magpies Pica pica to great spotted cuckoo Clamatorglandarius chicks. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 37(1), 7-13.

  38. Konrad Lorenz • Lorenz noticed that baby birds frequently would imprint upon whatever moving object they saw first, animate or not. • Imprinting is when juvenile organisms come to see another…thing…as a parent. • In the wild, typically they first saw their mother in the nest. • Lorenz demonstrated that baby birds might follow humans or even inanimate objects if they saw them first instead. • Imprinting is also irreversible.

  39. Imprinting’s Value • Today, biologists often use imprinting as a means of conservation. • Cranes, for example (why do they keep coming up?), have been imprinted on pilots wearing crane costumes and taught migratory routes that would keep them out of danger.

  40. Imprinting in Film • Even the 1996 movie Fly Away Home, starring a very young Anna Paquin, depicted the same thing! • Don’t ask if we can watch it. http://www.teachwithmovies.org/guides/fly-away-home.html

  41. Critical Period • Imprinting is also a great example of a behavior that is learned, yet also time sensitive. • Imprinting only occurs in the first few moments of a nestling’s (visual) life. • Therefore, imprinting only occurs during a critical period, before or after which no imprinting can happen. • In humans? Language learning. In birds? Songs.

  42. Critical Period: Case in Point • The cuckoo is a brood parasite. • Mama Cuckoo lays her eggs in other birds’ nests to let them take care of the young. • Because of the surrogate mother bird’s fixed action pattern, she doesn’t know the egg isn’t hers. She’ll incubate it just the same. • Cuckoos, once hatched, don’t really have a “song.” They learn the song of their surrogate mothers! • Weird Fact: Cuckoos also lay eggs that nearly precisely match the surrogate’s eggs, and parasitize the surrogate breed’s nests only. • There are, in a way, different “versions” of female cuckoos. • Tying it all together: Because cuckoos are actually taking advantage of another bird’s FAP, they are engaged in what’s known as code-breaking.

  43. Cuckoo Photos http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5c/Reed_warbler_cuckoo.jpg http://whyevolutionistrue.files.wordpress.com/2011/03/f2_hauber_egg.jpg

  44. One last thing on cuckoos… • Cuckoos also provide us an opportunity to discuss the concept of cross-fostering. • This is an elegant method of determining whether something is genetically or behaviorally driven. • Shortly after birth (or as eggs), switch the young around and have them raised by different parents. • Cuckoos automatically do this, remember? • So a cuckoo’s appearance, which is consistent with all cuckoos, is genetic (“nature”). • But, a cuckoo’s song is learned (“nurture”) because it varies based on its environment.

  45. Classic Experiment: Cross Fostering • Rat pups that are licked by their mothers grow up to be calm adults. • Rat pups that are not licked grow up to be anxious adults. • Is it that mother rats with poor social skills passed on their poor social skills to their high-anxiety pups? • Alternatively, is the licking behavior the sole determinant of rat “well-adjustedness?” • Cross-foster! • Sure enough, if you take rats born to a mother that does not lick her young and have them raised by a mother that does, they grow up to be calm just the same. • Rat lickin’ video!

  46. Back to innate behaviors… • Unlike birds, a lot of bee behaviors are innate. • Insect song (like crickets) is often completely fixed. • You can cross-foster all you want. Genetics determines their patterns. • Additionally, many innate behaviors are also social behaviors, and this is where Karl von Frisch comes in. • Social behaviors are those that are exhibited between individuals.

  47. Social Behavior Summary Slide • Communication and Language • Agonistic Behavior • Dominance Hierarchies • This is the one your teacher studied in college. • Represent! • Cooperation • Altruism

  48. Communication and Language • Bees (as discovered by Von Frisch) do a “waggle dance” to communicate food locations. • Waggle dance video! • Whales communicate via low-frequency sound across ocean basins. • Communications are sometimes learned (humans, birds), sometimes innate (bugs). • Case in point: French crows and American crows have different alarm calls. • FYI, that photo is a blackbird.

  49. Communication and Language • There are other forms of communication too, besides the auditory. • Visual (fireflies, for example) • Chemical (pheromones – hormones released outside the body)

  50. Pheromone Examples Female mosquitoes use CO2 concentrations to locate victims by their exhalations. Spiders sometimes use moth sex pheromones (allomones, since they’re from a different species) to lure prey. Big cat territory marking.

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