chap.01 principles of animal behavior 鄭先祐 (ayo) 教授 國立台南大學...
Post on 16-Dec-2015
317 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
2
Text book
Principles of animal behavior 2nd. Ed. Author: Lee Alan Dugatkin 2009, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
3
Preface
The heart, an examination of the empirical, theoretical, and conceptual foundation upon which the field of animal behavior rests.
My aim is to explain underlying concepts in a way that is scientifically rigorous but, at the same time, accessible to students.
The goal is to produce a book that instructors can use in their courses as well as in their research programs.
4
Major features
1. A balanced treatment of proximate and ultimate factors
2. Learning and cultural transmission presented alongside natural selection and phylogeny.
3. A thorough integration of proximate factors, including neurobiology, endocrinology, development, and molecular genetics.
4. An extensive discussion of phylogeny5. Interviews of prominent researchers at the
end of every chapter.6. The Norton animal behavior DVD
5
Contents in brief (I)
1. Principles of animal behavior2. The evolution of behavior3. Proximate factors4. Learning 5. Cultural transmission6. Sexual selection7. Mating systems8. Kinship9. Cooperation
6
Contents in brief (II)
10. Foraging11. Antipredator behavior12. Communication13. Habitat selection, territoriality,
and migration14. Aggression15. Play 16. Aging and disease17. Animal personalities
7
Chap.01 principles of animal behavior
Introduction Types of questions and levels of analysis Three foundations
1. Natural selection2. Individual learning3. Cultural transmission
Conceptual, theoretical, and empirical approaches1. Conceptual approaches2. Theoretical approaches3. Empirical approaches
Interview with Dr. E. O. Wilson An overview of what is to follow
8
Ethology
Although ethology overlaps with ecology, they are different disciplines, with ecologists focusing on the interaction of organisms with their environment, and ethologists investigating all aspects of animal behavior.
The study of animal behavior appears to have been so fundamental to human existence that the earliest cave painting tended to depict animals.
13
Types of questions and levels of analysis
Four types of questions1. Immediate stimuli (cue factors) ( 致使因
素 )
2. Development ( 發展、發育 )
3. Survival function (Natural selection)
4. Evolutionary history (phylogeny) Two levels
1. Proximate analysis ( 近因分析 )
2. Ultimate analysis ( 極因分析 )
14
Three foundations
Natural selection ( 天擇 )1
Individual learning ( 學習 )2
Cultural transmission ( 文化傳承 )
3
15
Foundation 1 – Natural selection
(A) a field cricket with normal wings
(B) a field cricket with flat wings.
(C) Sandfly larvae in a parasitized cricket.
24
Not only did grasshoppers in the learning condition approach the balanced diet dish more often, but this translated into quicker growth. Growth rate in grasshoppers is positively correlated with egg size and number.
25
Foundation 3– Cultural transmission
(A)When a rat scavenges in the trash, it may encounter new food items that are dangerous or spoiled and that can lead to illness or even death.
(B) smelling another rat provides olfactory cues about what it has eaten. This transfer of information from one rat to another about safe foods is a form of cultural transmission.
26
Information center hypothesisObserver rats had a tutor (demonstrator) who was trained to eat rat chow containing either (CO) or cinnamon (CIN) flavoring. Once the observer rats had time to interact with a demonstrator rat, the observer rats were much more likely to add their tutor’s food preferences to their own.
29
In many species, like the vervets shown here, mothers go to extreme lengths to provide for and protect their young offspring. W. D. Hamilton’s kin selection ideas provided a conceptual framework for understanding the special relations that close genetic relatives share.
33
Interview with E. O. Wilson (i)
Sociobiology is the study of the biological basis of all forms of social behavior and social organization in all kinds of organisms, including humans, and organized on a base of ethology and population biology.
Not in 1975 book (sociobiology), but in 1971 paper (Sociobiology: The New synthesis. I added the vertebrates to the social insects
and suggested that sociobiology could serve as a true scientific foundation for the social sciences.
35
Interview with E. O. Wilson (ii)
Animal behavior is a fundamental and extraordinarily interesting subject in its own right.
it is also basic to other disciplines of biology, all the way from neuroscience and behavioral genetics to ecology and conservation biology.
Is crucial to conservation biology and its applications.
36
Contents in brief (I)
1. Principles of animal behavior2. The evolution of behavior3. Proximate factors4. Learning 5. Cultural transmission6. Sexual selection7. Mating systems8. Kinship9. Cooperation
37
Contents in brief (II)
10. Foraging11. Antipredator behavior12. Communication13. Habitat selection, territoriality,
and migration14. Aggression15. Play 16. Aging and disease17. Animal personalities
38
Discussion questions (i)
1. Why do we need a science of ethology? What insights does this discipline provide both the scientist and the layperson?
2. Imagine that you are out in a forest, and you observe that squirrels there appear to cache their food only in the vicinity of certain species of plants. Construct a hypothesis for how this behavior may have been the result of (a) natural selection, (b) individual learning, and (c) social learning.
39
Discussion questions (ii)
3. What are the primary differences between individual learning and social learning?
4. What is the key difference between observational and experimental studies in ethology? What are some possible advantages to each type of each type of study?
5. Why do you suppose that mathematical theories play such a large part in ethology? Couldn’t hypotheses be derived in their absence? Why does mathematics force an investigator to be very explicit about his or her ethological hypotheses?
top related