Animal Behavior Final Exam

Animal behevior cards for the final

35 cards   |   Total Attempts: 188
  

Cards In This Set

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Acoustic Adaptation Hypothesis
Acoustic signals are specific to the type of environment the animal lives in. For example, if the animal lives in a forest where there is a lot of potential for interference, the animal is more likely to have short and simple sounds. However, if the animal lives in an open grassland, it can have a more complex sound.
Anti-bourgeois Strategy
This strategy instructs players to play dove if you are a territory holder, and hawk if you are not. Thus, when an intruder approaches a territory, the territory holder flees rather than fighting (ex. mexican spiders pg. 467).
Training for the unexpected
This theory for play suggests that it exists to develop the physical and psychological skills necessary to handle unexpected events in which the animals experiences a loss of control. From this theory, a number of specific predictions regarding animal play were generated.
Autocommunication
The sender and the receiver of the signal is the same individual. ex.) in echo-location- dolphins or bats use echo-location to gain information about food items in the habitat.
Bourgeois Strategy
This strategy instructs an individual to play hawk if it is a territory holder, but to play dove if it does not own a territory. In a contest, the resident wins and the intruder retreats (ex. speckled wood butterfly pg. 466).
Channel
The medium through which the signal must pass, which can be air, water or ground
Clock-shifting
Experimental manipulation of the amount of daylight and darkness animals are exposed to such that they experience a light-dark cycle that is different from the normal cycle at that time of the year
Communication
Communication occurs when there is a change in the probability of a state occurring in the receiver as a result of receiving a signal through a channel(air, water or ground).
Conditional Strategy
Ability to change strategy with respect to environmental changes
Conspecific cueing
The act of an individual gathering information that another individual of the same species has left behind, and using that to help in choosing where to settle. Ex.) Male lizards settle more in areas where there are other lizards already there. (They cue in on other individuals who have already evaluated the territory.
Cue
Information about yourself that is unintentionally left behind, thus giving away information that was not necessarily intended for the receiver. An example of this is leaving behind a footprint
Dear Enemy Effect
When an individual is more aggressive towards strangers than neighbors(in breeding sites). [Neighbors have lower risk of invading each others territories, no more fighting needed to assess neighbors ability and common defense against intruders.]
Deception
Is a receiver error, as a result of the signalers actions
Dominance hierarchies
Rank orderings of the individuals living in social groups. Individuals at the top of the hierarchies obtain access to more food, mating opportunities, and safer territories
Eavesdropping
Receiver listening in w/o the signalers knowledge. no cost to signaler but receiver benefits