Unit 8.1-2

  • Responses to the Environment

  • Behaviors:

    • They arise from interactions with the environment and serve various purposes.

  • Behavioral Ecology:

    • Developed in the 1970s, a significant discovery led to a Nobel Prize in Physiology, establishing ethology, which is the study of how evolutionary processes shape behaviors.

  • Behavior Definition:

    • Animal behavior is defined as the response to an internal or external stimulus.

    • The nature vs. nurture debate addresses genetic and environmental influences on behavior.

    • Behaviors are crucial for survival and reproduction, and they are subject to natural selection.

  • Understanding Behavior - Proximate vs. Ultimate Causes:

    • Proximate Cause:

    • Refers to how a behavior occurs or is modified.

    • Involves understanding the immediate stimulus and how experiences affect behavior during growth.

    • Ultimate Cause:

    • Explains why a behavior occurs in the context of natural selection.

    • Investigates how behavior aids survival and reproduction and its evolutionary basis.

  • Practice Problem Example:

    • Zebras may react to drinking water by having some watch for predators while others drink.

    • Proximate Causes:

    • The immediate stimulus is the need for water; the watching zebras help protect those drinking.

    • Ultimate Causes:

    • This behavior increases survival by reducing predation risk while drinking.

  • Types of Behavior:

    • Innate Behaviors:

    • Developmentally fixed and instinctive, they do not require learning.

    • They remain consistent regardless of experience or environment.

      • Kinesis: A form of movement that is non-directional and occurs in response to stimuli, resulting in changes in activity level, such as increased movement in unfavorable conditions.

      • Taxis: A directed movement towards or away from a stimulus, allowing organisms to actively respond to environmental cues.

        • Phototaxis: A movement towards light sources, facilitating beneficial processes such as photosynthesis in plants and aiding organisms in finding optimal hab itats.

        • Chemotaxis: A movement towards or away from chemical stimuli, which is essential for organisms to locate resources like food or to avoid harmful substances.

        • Geotaxis: A form of taxis in which organisms move in response to gravity, helping them orient themselves appropriately in their environment, such as roots growing downward and shoots growing upward.

    • Learned Behaviors:

    • These evolve based on environmental experiences and exhibit variability across populations.

  • Examples of Behaviors:

  • Fixed Action Patterns (FAPs):

    • Sequence of unlearned acts linked to specific stimuli.

    • Examples include male stickleback fish becoming aggressive when seeing the color red.

  • Learning Types:

    • Imprinting:

    • A long-term response occurring during a sensitive development period, like ducklings following their mother.

    • Spatial Learning:

    • Animals establish memories based on their surroundings, such as birds remembering where they hid their nests.

    • Associative Learning:

    • Linking one feature to another, e.g., monarch butterflies associated with foul taste.

    • Social Learning:

    • Learning through observation, evident in chimpanzees breaking nuts.

  • Natural Selection:

    • Favors behaviors enhancing survival and reproduction, including foraging and mating behaviors.

    • Cooperative Behaviors:

    • Increase fitness through predator warnings and altruistic actions seen in naked mole rat colonies.

  • Responses in Plants:

    • Plants can react to light (phototropism), development influenced by day length (photoperiodism), and use physical and chemical defenses against herbivores.

    • Example: Lima bean plants release volatile chemicals to inform neighbors of herbivore presence.

    • Soil pH can alter flower coloration, such as hydrangea blooms turning blue in acidic soil (pH 5) and pink in neutral to basic soil (pH 7).

  • Critically Think:

    • Consider the proximate and ultimate causes of animal behaviors and how they relate to survival. For example, raven calls during feeding compared to investment in food defense can be explored.