Behaviour Flashcards

1
Q

Name 4 different animal mating strategies

A
  • A mate for life
  • Several mates over one life time
  • A mate for a breeding season
  • Several mates over one mating season
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2
Q

Why do animals have mating strategies?

A
  • To increase chance of survival of offspring

- To increase chance of their genes being passed on to the offspring

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3
Q

Define behaviour

A

The response of an organism to its environment which increases chances of survival

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4
Q

What is innate behaviour?

A

It’s genetically determined - passed onto offspring (usually help with survival)

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5
Q

What is learned behaviour?

A

Behaviour that changes in response to experience

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6
Q

What are some characteristics of animals that have learned behaviour? Name 3

A
  • Longer lifespans - need time to acquire experiences
  • Require parental care and learn from them
  • Live with other members of same species and learn from them
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7
Q

What is imprinting?

A

Baby organism can instantly recognise the 1st face they see as the mother and will automatically follow that organism

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8
Q

What is habituation?

A

Organisms learn to ignore stimuli which don’t result in harm or reward

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9
Q

What is classical conditioning?

A

Animals learn to relate a pair of events and respond to the first in anticipation of the second
i.e. natural reflex becomes associated with stimulus

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10
Q

What is operant conditioning?

A

When animal learns to carry out specific learned behaviour as it leads to a reward
OR doesn’t carry out specific behaviour as it leads to punishment

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11
Q

Give an example of habituation

A

Many animals learnt to ignore movement and noise of wind and ocean

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12
Q

Give an example of imprinting

A

Birds learn who their mother is, as she’s the first they see after hatching

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13
Q

Give an example of classical conditioning

A

Pavlov (Russian scientist) trained dogs to salivate when they heard a bell

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14
Q

Name 2 human use of animal behaviour (via operant conditioning)

A
  • Sniffer dogs

- Police horses

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15
Q

Name 3 types of animal communication

A
  1. Visual
  2. Sound
  3. Chemical
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16
Q

Many of visual signals can be read by ____ species

A

more than one

17
Q

What might visual signals be linked to?

A

Selecting a mate, reproduction and raising offspring

18
Q

Give an example of visual signal

A

Coral snakes use bright colours to warn its poisonous

19
Q

What are sound signals used for? (name 3)

A
  • Communication
  • Marking territories
  • Finding possible mates & warn off rivals
20
Q

Give an example of sound signal

A

Wolves howl = maintains contact between pack members and defends their territory

21
Q

What are chemical signals used for? (name 3)

A
  • Attracting a mate
  • Communication
  • Protection
22
Q

Give an example of chemical signal

A

In social insects (e.g. bees and ants) = used to communicate everything (e.g. where to find food)

23
Q

When are police horses used? (name 2 scenarios)

A
  1. Used in large public gatherings

2. Used when searching for people in difficult, inaccessible terrain

24
Q

Why are police horses used in large public gatherings? (name 2 reasons)

A
  1. Allow police to move through a crowed = people will give way to horses more easily than to someone on foot
  2. Allow police to see what’s happening
25
Q

Police horses are conditioned to do what?

A

To cope calmly with large crowds, lots of noise, etc

26
Q

Why might parental behaviour be risky for parents?

A

Takes up time and resources = makes them vulnerable to

starvation and predators