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Animal Behavior Chapter 34.

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Presentation on theme: "Animal Behavior Chapter 34."— Presentation transcript:

1 Animal Behavior Chapter 34

2 Animal Behavior Behavior: the way an organism reacts to changes in its environment Stimulus: signal that carries detectable information Response: reaction to stimulus

3 2 types of behavior Innate behavior Learned behavior

4 1) Innate Behavior Instinctive, inborn behavior
Animal “knows” behavior without previous experience to the stimuli in which it responds Ex: Salmon swimming upstream, dogs barking at snakes/intruders

5 1) Innate Behavior Animals carry on behaviors with adaptive value:
Getting food Avoiding predators Caring for young Finding shelter Attracting mates Enable reproduction & survival of species

6 1) Innate Behavior Automatic responses Instincts Reflexes
No conscious control Fight/Flight/Freeze response Instincts

7 1) Innate Behavior Fixed Action Patterns Quick automatic response
Animal recognizes stimulus & continues until all parts of behavior are accomplished

8 2) Learned Behavior When behavior changes due to practice or experience Allows animals to adapt to change Ex: Not putting hand on a hot stove  4 main types of learning: habituation, classic conditioning, operant conditioning, and insight learning Black bears have learned to choose minivans as targets for raiding food! (Nat. Geo)

9 2) Learned Behavior A) Habituation
An animal becomes habituated when it no longer responds to a stimulus. The gorillas shown here are habituated to the presence of humans.

10 B) Classic Conditioning
Pairing an unconditioned stimulus to with a neutral stimulus to eventually produce a conditioned response.-all based on innate behavior Ex: Dog gets excited for walk when owner picks up leash. Classic experiment: Pavlov’s dogs

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13 C) Operant Conditioning
When an animal makes a mental connection and CHOOSES to behaves in a certain way through repeated practice, in order to receive a reward or avoid punishment O.C. focuses on strengthening or weakening voluntary behaviors

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17 D) Insight Learning Most complicated form of learning
When an animal applies something it already learned to a new (novel) situation

18 E) Imprinting Imprinting: Form of learning that occurs at a specific critical time forming a social attachment to an object or individual Birds imprint within a day or two of hatching Usually irreversible

19 Patterns of Behavior Behavioral Cycles
Some behaviors are cyclical and follow their environment. Migration: behavior influenced by seasons Circadian rhythms: behavior influenced by time of day (sleep at night, active in day)

20 Courtship Ritualistic behavior regarding mating shows the overall health of potential mates Courtship: One individual sends out stimuli (sounds, dances, chemicals) to attract mate

21 Social Behavior Animals frequently interact with members of their own species when hunting, grazing Greater chances of survival: protect themselves/offspring from predators, work together to find food.

22 Competition Behavior displayed when animals fight for resources (food, territory) or mates. May lead to aggression: threatening behavior one animal uses to out-compete another

23 Communication Seen when animals behave socially
Used to convey information from one animal to another Types of communication: visual, chemical, sound, language (language is likely the most complex)


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