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Exam (elaborations)

ANIMAL BEHAVIOR FINAL EXAM

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ANIMAL BEHAVIOR FINAL EXAM

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  • August 6, 2024
  • 44
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • ANIMAL BEHAVIOR
  • ANIMAL BEHAVIOR
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ANIMAL BEHAVIOR
FINAL EXAM

Topic 8. Dispersal, Migration, Habitat Selection, and Territoriality - answer-

how important is learning in maintaining a territory? - answer- territory-related decisions
often do not end after a territory has been established

Dear enemy hypothesis: an animal can reduce the costs of maintaining a territory if it
learns who its neighbors are and switches its defense of the territory from actual combat
to threat displays

2 general types of threat displays - answer- 1. lateral presentation (display from side to
show full extent of dewlap)

2. threatening with teeth or other weaponry

parasitization of established territory - answer- alternate strategy for gaining resources
of a territory without establishing its own

called sneaker or satellite strategies

ex. bluegill sunfish

sneaker/satellite strategies example - answer- parental males are older who
aggressively defend territories in which females shed eggs

establish sites of nesting (territories)

,alternative reproductive tactics in males - answer- 1. alternative mating tactics - multiple
behavioral mating phenotypes in pop

2. satellite male

3. sneaker male

satellite male - answer- male circles like a satellite looking for mating possibilities that
he might intercept

alternative, parasitic mating tactic

remains near a territorial male to intercept females that are attracted to the territorial
male; ; do NOT establish territory

sneaker male - answer- avoid detection and then jump right in an shed sperm right as
female is shedding eggs in nest

alternative, parasitic mating tactic; do NOT establish territory

evolutionary stable strategy (ESS) - answer- strategy that, if adopted by individuals in a
population, cannot be trumped by another strategy bc yields the highest fitness

parental male still lives longer despite sneaker and satellite males that use alternative
strategies

satellite male strategy - answer- mimic the color pattern of females (genetically based)
and drift down when female has been attracted to the parental male's territory

behaves like females, produce sperm at same time as parental male when female
sheds eggs

sneaker male strategy - answer- young, small (future) satellite males that wait until a
female is ready to mate with the parental male then dart in and produce sperm at the
same time as parental male

neither ___ nor ___ ever become parentals - answer- satellites nor sneakers

parental vs sneaker to satellite - answer- P: resources diverted to growth instead of
reproduction. territorial and attract females

SS: resources diverted to reproduction at early age; small individuals that can deliver
sperm at early age

alternative male phenotypes in bluegill sunfish - answer- is a mixed ESS

,2 strategies:
1. parental
2. sneaker and satellites (sneakers develop into satellites with age; parental does not
develop into others)

relative numbers of sneakers, satellites and parentals in Lake Opinicon - answer- 64%
sneakers
21% satellites
15% parentals

sneakers are going to reproduce first, develop into satellites but might not survive

is what case are satellites tolerated? - answer- they increase the security of the territory

ex. Pied Wagtails

pied wagtails - answer- OWNERS DILEMMA

1. if food resources (insects) are abundant, these birds accepts intruders/satellites on
territory and this aids in defending the territory

2. if food is NOT abundant, territory holder will chase away an intruder

conditional cooperation - answer- cooperation sometimes but not always depending on
the environment and conditions

territories be shared by ______ OR ___ OR ___ - answer- individuals or mated pairs or
family groups

characteristics seen when territories are held by family groups - answer- see altruistic
helping behavior by relatives (helping relatives and siblings)

young, helping relatives (usually siblings) can inherit territory from parents

basis of kin selection - 50% of shared DNA in juvenile that stay and help raise siblings

Florida Scrub Jay - answer- display cooperative breeding or altruistic helping behavior
by relatives

conflict in animal behavior not necessarily associated with territoriality - answer- conflict
in the definition of aggression

Lorenz: fighting instinct

Psychologists: intended behavior

, Behavioral Ecologists: form of resource competition

agonistic behavior - answer- submissive behaviors

suite of behavior patterns used during conflict with a conspecific, usually indicating
whether an individual is going to submit to the other animal or fight if they other does not
submit

dominance hierarchy - answer- org of individuals in a group that occurs when
competition of resources lead to aggression

common in group living or social animals

serve to reduce the amt of physical combat among group members

Schjelderup-Ebbe 1921 - answer- studied pecking order in chickens

found that social structures lead to more stable flocks in which aggression was reduced
among individuals

dyadic encounters - answer- encounters btw 2 individuals at a time

most dominance hierarchies are established by these encounters

rank acquisition charts - answer- determine who is dominant to who

x-axis: losers

y-axis: winners

BSh gene dominant to everyone

one animal is dominant to another if... - answer- it controls some aspect of that animal's
behavior and that relationship can predict the outcome of future competitive interactions

pecking order - answer- implies a linear relationship, but dominance hierarchies can be
very complex

transitive deductions - answer- determines hierarchical relationships

ex. if A>B and B>C, then A>C

Transitivity in Betta Fish - answer- males adjust aggression after watching the outcome
of other fights

can watch an aggressive encounter & figure out which one is dominant and submissive

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