An action carried out by muscles under control of the nervous system.
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Ultimate causation
Why a behavior occurs in the context of natural selection
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Ethology
The study of animal behavior observed in a natural environment.
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Behavioral ecology
The study of the ecological and evolutionary basis for animal behavior.
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Tinbergen’s experiment
The fish experiment with competition between the different male fish
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Fixed action pattern
A sequence of unlearned acts directly linked to a simple stimulus
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Sign stimulus
The trigger for a behavior is an external cue called
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Migration
A regular long-distance change in location.
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Circadian clock
An internal mechanism that has a 24-hour periodicity
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Circannual rhythms
Behavioral rhythms linked to the yearly cycle of seasons.
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Signal
A stimulus transmitted from one organism to another.
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Communication
Transmission and reception of signals between animals
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Pheromones
Animals that communicate through odors or tastes emit chemical substances called
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Innate behavior
Behaviors that are performed by all individuals the same way each time
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Cross-fostering study
The young of one species are placed in the care of adults from another species in the same or a similar environment
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Learning
The modification of behavior as a result of specific experiences.
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Imprinting
The establishment of a long lasting behavioral response to a particular individual or object.
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Sensitive period
A specific time period in development where imprinting occurs.
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Spatial learning
The establishment of a memory that reflects the environment’s spatial structure
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Cognitive map
A representation in an animal’s nervous system of the spatial relationships between objects in its surroundings.
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Associative learning
The ability to associate one environmental feature with another is called (EX- Pavlov’s dog experiment)
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Classical conditioning
An arbitrary stimulus becomes associated with a particular outcome
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Cognition
The process of knowing that involves awareness, reasoning, recollection, and judgement
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Problem Solving
The cognitive activity of devising a method to proceed from one condition to another in the face of real or apparent obstacles
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Social learning
Learning through observing and interpreting the behavior of other individuals
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Culture
A system of information transfer through social learning or teaching that influences the behavior of individuals in a population.
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Foraging
Food obtaining behavior
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Optimal foraging model
To study the ultimate causation of foraging strategies, biologists can apply this type of a cost-benefit analysis
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Monogamous
One male mating with one female
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Polygamous
An individual of one sex mating with several of the others
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Sexual dimorphism
The extent to which females and males differ in appearance, typically varies with the type of mating system.
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Mate-choice copying
A behavior in which individuals in a population copy the mate choice of others.
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Game theory
Evaluates alternative strategies in situations where the outcome depends on the strategies of all the individuals involved
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Anti diuretic hormone (ADH) or vasopressin
Peptide that is released during mating and binds to a specific receptor in the central nervous system.
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Altruism
Describes a behavior that reduces an animal’s individual fitness but increases the fitness of other individuals in the population.
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Inclusive fitness
The total effect an individual has by providing aid that engages other close relatives to produce offspring
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Coefficient of relatedness
Equals the fraction of genes that are shared
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Hamilton’s Rule
Natural selection favors altruism when the benefit to the recipient multiplied by the coefficient of relatedness exceeds the cost to the altruist. When rB > C
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Reciprocal altruism
Exchange of aid between different animals who aren’t related
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Ecology
The scientific study of the interactions between organisms and the environment
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Environment
Other organisms as well as the physical aspects of an organism’s surroundings
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Organismal ecology
Includes the subdisciplines of physiological, evolutionary, and behavioral ecology, is concerned with how an organism’s structure, physiology, and behavior meet the challenges posed by its environment
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Population ecology
Analyzes factors that affect population size and how and why it changes through time
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Community ecology
Examines how interactions between species affect community structure and organization
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Ecosystem ecology
Emphasizes energy flow and chemical cycling between organisms and the environment
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Landscape ecology
Focuses on the factors controlling exchange of materials, energy and organisms across
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Global ecology
Examines how the regional exchange of energy and materials influences the functioning and distribution of organisms across the biosphere
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Biosphere
Global ecosystem, sum of all the planet’s ecosystems and landscapes
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Climate
The long-term prevailing weather conditions in a given area
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Microclimate
Very fine, localized patterns in climate conditions
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Abiotic
Nonliving factors that influence the distribution and abundance
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Biotic
Living factors that influence the distribution and abundance of life on earth
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Climate change
A directional change to the global climate that lasts three decades or more
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Biomes
Major life zones characterized by vegetation type in terrestrial biomes
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Climograph
A plot of the annual mean temperature and precipitation in a particular region
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Ecotone
The are of intergradation of two different biomes
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Canopy
The top layer of trees in a forest
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Disturbance
Is an event such as a storm, fire, or human activity that changes a community
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Photic zone
The region where there is sufficient light for photosynthesis
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Aphotic zone
Region where little light penetrates
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Pelagic zone
Photic and aphotic zones lies this area
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Abyssal zone
The part of the ocean 2,000-6,000 m below the surface
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Benthic zone
Bottom of all of these aquatic zones
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Benthos
Communities of organisms collectively called this living in the benthic zone
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Dettritus
A major source of food for many benthic species is this dead organic matter
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Thermocline
In the ocean and most lakes, a narrow layer of abrupt temperature change is called this
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Turnover
The movement of something into, through and out of a place, the rate at which a thing is depleted and replaced
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Dispersal
The movement of individuals or gametes away from their area of origin or from centers of high population density
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Population
A group of individuals of a single species living in the same general area
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Density
Pattern of spacing among individuals per unit area or volume
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Dispersion
Pattern of spacing among individuals within the boundaries of the population
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Mark-recapture method
Used to estimate the size of wildlife populations
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Immigration
The influx of new individuals from other areas
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Emigration
Movement of individuals out of a population
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Territoriality
The defense of a bounded physical space against encroachment by other individuals
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Demography
Study of key characteristics of populations and how they change over time
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Life table
Summarizes the survival and reproductive rates of individuals in specific age groups within a population
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Cohort
Group of individuals of the same age, from birth until all of the individuals are dead
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Survivorship curve
A plot of the proportion or numbers in a cohort still alive at each age
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Exponential population growth
A population that experiences ideal conditions increases in size by a constant proportion at each instant in time.
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Intrinsic rate of increase
The per capita rate at which an exponentially growing population increases in size at each instant in time
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Carrying capacity
Maximum population size that a particular environment can sustain.
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Logistic population growth
The per capita rate of population growth approaches zero as the population size nears the carrying capacity
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Life history
Traits that affect an organism’s schedule of reproduction and survival make up this
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Semelparity
“One-shot” pattern of big-bang reproduction
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Iteroparity
Repeated reproduction
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K-Selection
Selection for traits that are advantageous at high densities
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R-selection
Selection for traits that maximize reproductive success in uncrowded environments (low density)
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Density independent
A birth rate or death rate that does not change with population density
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Density dependent
A death rate that increases with population density or a birth rate that falls with rising density
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Population dynamics
Population fluctuations from year to year or place to place
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Metapopulation
Immigration and emigration are particularly important when a number of local populations are linked
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Demographic transition
The movement from high birth and death rates toward low birth and death rates, which tends to accompany industrialization and improved living conditions, is called
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Age structure
The relative number of individuals of each age in the population
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Ecological footprint
Summarizes the aggregate land and water area required by each person, city, or nation