Behaviour Flashcards

1
Q

Natural Selection

A

The process that occurs when individuals differ in their traits and the differences are correlated with differences in reproductive success.

Mechanism by which evolution can occur.

(Alcock, 2013)

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2
Q

What is the difference between natural selection and theory of descent through modification?

A

Descent with modification is the process that is used by natural selection. As traits are passed through generations, there is modification. These modifications are the differences that natural selection will either get rid of, or will increase, based on the environment.

https://study.com/learn/lesson/descent-modification-thoery-examples.html#:~:text=Descent%20with%20modification%20is%20the,increase%2C%20based%20on%20the%20environment.

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3
Q

What conditions must be met for evolution to occur by natural selection?

A
  1. There must be variation between individuals of a species in some of their characteristics,
  2. There must be differences in reproductive success with some individuals having more surviving offspring than others because of their characteristics.
  3. The characteristics must be heritable with parents being able to pass it onto their offspring.

(Alcock, 2013)

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4
Q

What is the difference between adaptation and evolution?

A

Evolution is the process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms over time.

Adaptation is a trait that improves an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce in an environment.

https://www.khanacademy.org/science/high-school-biology/hs-evolution/hs-evolution-and-natural-selection/a/hs-evolution-and-natural-selection-review

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5
Q

Gene

A

A segment of DNA, typically one that encodes information about the sequence of amino acids that makes up a protein.

(Alcock, 2013)

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6
Q

Allele

A

A form of a gene. Different alleles typically code for distinctive variants of the same enzyme.

(Alcock, 2013)

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7
Q

How are alleles linked to evolution?

A

An allele that is linked to reproductive success will be linked to an adaptation - other alleles will disappear over time.

(Alcock, 2013)

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8
Q

Darwinian Puzzle

A

A trait that reduces fitness (reproductive success) rather than increasing it yet is still present.

(Alcock, 2013)

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9
Q

Fitness

A

An organism’s ability to survive and reproduce in a particular environment.

(Mac Dictionary)

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10
Q

Behavioural Strategy

A

An inherited behaviour pattern that seems to not actually benefit the individual, e.g., the willingness of individuals to assist close relatives even though their help reduces their direct fitness.

(Alcock, 2013)

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11
Q

Theory of Descent with Modification

A

Darwin’s argument that over evolutionary history, changes accumulate gradually in ancestral species, altering them more and more as these ancestral species evolve into more recent forms derived from their predecessors.

(Alcock, 2013)

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12
Q

Phylogeny

A

An evolutionary tree of the species that were derived from a common ancestor.

(Alcock, 2013)

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13
Q

What are Tinbergen’s four questions? What are they based on?

Which are proximate and which are ultimate?

A

Based on what he deemed to be the 4 fundamental problems raised in biology and that one needs to understand all to understand a behaviour.

Ultimate:
Survival value
Evolution

Proximate:
Mechanism (Tinbergen called causation)
Ontogeny

(Alcock, 2013; Bateson et al, 2013; Tinbergen, 2009)

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14
Q

Ontogeny of Behaviours

A

Aka development; a proximate cause of behaviour.

How did the behaviour come to be?

Looks at how a behaviour developed during the lifetime of the individual including experience and learning.

(Alcock, 2013; Bateson et al, 2013; Tinbergen, 2009)

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15
Q

Mechanism of Behaviours

A

A proximate cause of behaviour.

What causes the behaviour to be performed? Which stimuli elicit or what physiological mechanisms cause the behaviour?

(Alcock, 2013; Bateson et al, 2013; Tinbergen, 2009)

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16
Q

Evolution of Behaviours

A

Aka Phylogeny; an ultimate cause of behaviour.

Looks at how a behaviour evolved over the history of a species.

(Alcock, 2013; Bateson et al, 2013; Tinbergen 2009)

17
Q

Survival Value of Behaviours

A

Aka Function; an ultimate cause of behaviour.

What does the trait do?

In which way does the behaviour increase the animal’s fitness (i.e. its survival and reproduction)?

(Alcock, 2013; Bateson et al, 2013)

18
Q

Why is it difficult to determine how a characteristic developed?

A

It’s not just a matter of genes that were inherited; many other factors influence development e.g., cytoplasmic effects, behavioural traditions, etc.

Development is influenced by cultural knowledge and ecological legacies i.e., they were gathered by multiple individuals over multiple generations.

The environment can be crucial for normal development.

(Bateson et al, 2013)

19
Q

Why is it difficult to determine how a characteristic evolved?

A

Not just genes; chance events (e.g., genetic drift, founder effects) impact what genes are inherited.

Evolution is frequently a result of adapting one characteristic already present into another one (co-option).

Behaviour can impact evolution, e.g., choice (e.g., of mates), how mobile an organism is, ecological and developmental niches, adaptability, learning, social transmission.

(Bateson et al, 2013)

20
Q

How is development and mechanism related?

A

Development is continuous, so understanding it requires you to understand how it works at all relevant times - so understanding mechanism requires a specified point in time of development.

(Bateson et al, 2013)

21
Q

What are the 3 key behavioural domains for high fitness? Why?

A
  1. Movement and space-use patterns.
  2. Foraging and predator-prey related behaviours
  3. Social behaviour and reproduction

All impact survival and reproduction.

(Berger-Tal et al, 2011)

22
Q

Behaviour

A

The way an animal acts in response to a stimulus either internal such as hormones or external such as temperature change.

(Mac Dictionary)

23
Q

Ultimate Causes of Behaviour

List Them

A

The evolutionary, historical reason why a behaviour is the way it is.

Evolution
Survival Value

(Alcock, 2013)

24
Q

Proximate Causes of Behaviour

List Them

A

An immediate underlying cause based on the operation of internal mechanisms possessed by an individual.

Mechanism
Ontogeny

Happen within the lifespan of an individual.

(Alcock, 2013)

25
Q

How are the proximate and ultimate causes of behaviour related?

A

Behavioural traits have both ultimate and proximate causes that are complementary, not mutually exclusive.

Because the immediate mechanisms of behaviour have an evolutionary basis, the proximate and ultimate causes of behaviour are related, and both are required for a full explanation of a behavioural trait.

(Alcock, 2013)

26
Q

How does a behavioural trait develop?

A

The development of any trait, including a behavioural ability, is the result of an interaction between the genotype of the developing organism and its environment, which consists of not only the food it receives and the metabolic products produced by its cells (the material environment) but also its sensory experiences (the experiential environment). Genes can respond to signals from the environment by altering their activity leading to changes in the gene products available to the developing organism.

(Alcock, 2013)

27
Q

To which of Tinbergen’s questions does my research relate?

A

I’m looking at the immediate causes of behaviour, specifically the stimuli that elicit the behaviour. The stimuli in the context of my work being the various habitat variables that I’m measuring and comparing to behaviour.

Therefore, I think my work fits best in Tinbergen’s mechanism questions category.

28
Q

Provide an example of each type of behavioural cause.

A

Proximate

Mechanism - How moths are able to avoid bats at night - Bats use very high frequency sounds to navigate at night and a moth’s ear is structured in such a way that it picks up these frequencies and this triggers neurons in the moth’s brain causing it to move.

Ontogeny - Imprinting in birds - young birds follow around an older individual early and social interactions dictate their behaviours in the future such as how they choose a mate.

Ultimate

Survival Value and Evolution - monogomy in prairie voles - survival value is that it ensures the male fathers all that females offspring (which is not guaranteed if female can mate with any male) and evolutionary as it evolved from an earlier ancestor and remains present today.

(Alcock, 2013)

29
Q

How do fishes and turtles sense their environment?

A

Both have vision, a sense of touch, and a great sense of smell.

They can also both sense vibrations and pressure changes in their environment that can help them detect prey, predators, and obstacles - fish do this with their lateral line.

They’re also both thought to be able to orient themselves with the earth’s magnetic field using magnetoreception but this is poorly understood in both.

Turtles are also thought to use sun compass orientation but this is also poorly understood.

In a lot of cases these senses are adapted to their environment. For example, walleye have tapetum lucidum in their eye which amplifies ambient light because they’re normally in deeper water.