Search results for "Animal behaviour"

showing 10 items of 26 documents

Social versus individual learning: fitness consequences of two different strategies for defence

2014

Animal Behaviour Coevolutionary selectionSettore BIO/05 - Zoologia
researchProduct

Observed heterospecific clutch size can affect offspring investment decisions.

2011

Optimal investment in offspring is important in maximizing lifetime reproductive success. Yet, very little is known how animals gather and integrate information about environmental factors to fine tune investment. Observing the decisions and success of other individuals, particularly when those individuals initiate breeding earlier, may provide a way for animals to quickly arrive at better breeding investment decisions. Here we show, with a field experiment using artificial nests appearing similar to resident tit nests with completed clutches, that a migratory bird can use the observed high and low clutch size of a resident competing bird species to increase and decrease clutch size and egg…

Avian clutch sizeReproductive successOffspringEcologyReproductionfood and beveragesBiologyEnvironmentInvestment (macroeconomics)Affect (psychology)Clutch SizeAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Biological EvolutionSongbirdsInvestment decisionsSpecies SpecificityAnimalsClutchFemaleAnimal BehaviourSeasonsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSocial informationFinlandBiology letters
researchProduct

Nuovi derivati della Dopamina nell’Addiction da sostanze d’abuso: studi preclinici su modelli sperimentali murini

Dopamine derivatives CNS delivery Acetaldehyde Animal Behaviour Analysis Addiction Dopaminergic Neurotransmission Alcoholism Depressive-like behaviour cognitive flexibility in silico modelling molecular docking.Settore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico ApplicativoSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
researchProduct

La relación con los animales: un nuevo ámbito de la intervención socioeducativa

2014

This article analyses the educational approaches towards the animal-human relationship which have been developed during the last 20 years. The article establishes a chain of states in that relationship and presents the reasons why those states are consecutive or, occasionally, simultaneous. Next, the different European profiles of social educators are reviewed to see which of these are more open towards educational action with animals, something which could be considered a new field for educators if they have adequate professional training. A series of European (and some American) websites are analysed in order to determine their approach towards the human-animal relationship. Although most…

EDUCATIONAL THERAPYEducators’ trainingFormación de educadoreslcsh:LB5-3640EducationEducational therapyInterpersonal relationshipEducació socialOpenness to experienceSociologySocial scienceTerapia educativaEDUCATORS’ TRAININGbusiness.industryField (Bourdieu)Professional developmentSensitivity trainingPublic relationsAnimal behaviourANIMAL BEHAVIOURlcsh:Theory and practice of educationAction (philosophy)Content analysisSocial actionEducational therapyConductas animalesIntervención socialSOCIAL ACTIONbusinesslcsh:Llcsh:Education
researchProduct

When more is less: the fitness consequences of predators attacking more unpalatable prey when more are presented

2010

In 1879, Fritz Müller hypothesized that mimetic resemblance in which defended prey display the same warning signal would share the costs of predator education. Although Müller argued that predators would need to ingest a fixed number of prey with a given visual signal when learning to avoid unpalatable prey, this assumption lacks empirical support. We report an experiment which shows that, as the number of unpalatable prey presented to them increased, avian predators attacked higher numbers of those prey. We calculated that, when predators increase attacks, the fitness costs incurred by unpalatable prey can be substantial. This suggests that the survival benefits of mimicry could be lower t…

Food ChainBehavior AnimalEcologyGallus gallus domesticusBiologyAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Models BiologicalMüllerian mimicryPredationFood chainPredatory behaviorPredatory BehaviorMimicryAnimalsLearningAnimal BehaviourFemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesPredatorChickens
researchProduct

Does foreplay matter? Gammarus pulex females may benefit from long-lasting precopulatory mate guarding.

2011

Precopulatory mate guarding (PCMG) is generally assumed to be costly for both sexes. However, males may gain by displaying long-lasting mate guarding under strong male–male competition. Surprisingly, the potential for females to benefit from being held by males has been largely overlooked in previous studies. In Gammarus pulex , an amphipod crustacean, PCMG lasts several weeks, yet females are described as bearing only cost from such male mating strategy. We investigated potential female benefits by assessing the effect of mate guarding on her intermoult duration. Unpaired females had longer intermoult duration than paired females. Intermoult duration clearly decreased when paired females …

Male0106 biological sciencesAvian clutch sizeLong lastingintermoult durationZoologyamplexusMolting010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSexual conflictSexual Behavior AnimalAmplexus[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/SymbiosisAnimalsAmphipoda0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050102 behavioral science & comparative psychologyMatingprecopula[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyMate guardingbiologyEcology05 social sciencesClutch Sizebiology.organism_classificationAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Gammarus pulexPulexsexual conflictFemaleAnimal Behaviour[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosis
researchProduct

Flexible parental care: Uniparental incubation in biparentally incubating shorebirds

2017

The relative investment of females and males into parental care might depend on the population’s adult sex-ratio. For example, all else being equal, males should be the more caring sex if the sex-ratio is male biased. Whether such outcomes are evolutionary fixed (i.e. related to the species’ typical sex-ratio) or whether they arise through flexible responses of individuals to the current population sex-ratio remains unclear. Nevertheless, a flexible response might be limited by the evolutionary history of the species, because one sex may have lost the ability to care or because a single parent cannot successfully raise the brood. Here, we demonstrate that after the disappearance of one pare…

Male0301 basic medicine0106 biological sciencesÞróun lífsinsBehavioural ecologylcsh:MedicineEvolutionary ecology01 natural sciencesNesting BehaviorCharadriiformes[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosislcsh:Science10. No inequalityIncubationeducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinaryEcologyEvolutionary theory05 social sciencesAnimal behaviourUmönnunSexual selectionSexual selectionFemaleSex ratioPopulationZoologyBiology010603 evolutionary biologyArticle03 medical and health sciencesEvolutionary ecology ; Evolutionary theory ; Sexual selection ; Animal behaviour ; Behavioural ecologySpecies SpecificityPörunaratferliAnimals0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology14. Life underwatereducationEvolutionary theory[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyHatchinglcsh:RAtferlisfræðiBrood030104 developmental biologylcsh:QEvolutionary ecology[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyPaternal care[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosis
researchProduct

Polyandry enhances offspring survival in an infanticidal species

2009

The adaptive significance of polyandry is an intensely debated subject in sexual selection. For species with male infanticidal behaviour, it has been hypothesized that polyandry evolved as female counterstrategy to offspring loss: by mating with multiple males, females may conceal paternity and so prevent males from killing putative offspring. Here we present, to our knowledge, the first empirical test of this hypothesis in a combined laboratory and field study, and show that multiple mating seems to reduce the risk of infanticide in female bank voles Myodes glareolus . Our findings thus indicate that females of species with non-resource based mating systems, in which males provide nothing…

MaleBehavior AnimalbiologyArvicolinaeOffspringAdaptation BiologicalZoologyMating Preference Animalbiology.organism_classificationMating systemAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)SpermBank voleArvicolinaeSexual selectionLinear ModelsAnimalsFemaleAnimal BehaviourAdaptationMatingGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesBiology Letters
researchProduct

Raiders from the sky: slavemaker founding queens select for aggressive host colonies.

2012

Reciprocal selection pressures in host–parasite systems drive coevolutionary arms races that lead to advanced adaptations in both opponents. In the interactions between social parasites and their hosts, aggression is one of the major behavioural traits under selection. In a field manipulation, we aimed to disentangle the impact of slavemaking ants and nest density on aggression of Temnothorax longispinosus ants. An early slavemaker mating flight provided us with the unique opportunity to study the influence of host aggression and demography on founding decisions and success. We discovered that parasite queens avoided colony foundation in parasitized areas and were able to capture more broo…

MaleBiologyHost-Parasite InteractionsNestmedicineAnimalsMatingSocial BehaviorSelection (genetic algorithm)Models StatisticalBehavior AnimalAggressionHost (biology)EcologyAntsReproductionTemnothorax longispinosusAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Adaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionBroodAggressionBiological dispersalFemaleAnimal Behaviourmedicine.symptomGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesBiology letters
researchProduct

Learning outdoors: male lizards show flexible spatial learning under semi-natural conditions.

2012

Spatial cognition is predicted to be a fundamental component of fitness in many lizard species, and yet some studies suggest that it is relatively slow and inflexible. However, such claims are based on work conducted using experimental designs or in artificial contexts that may underestimate their cognitive abilities. We used a biologically realistic experimental procedure (using simulated predatory attacks) to study spatial learning and its flexibility in the lizard Eulamprus quoyii in semi-natural outdoor enclosures under similar conditions to those experienced by lizards in the wild. To evaluate the flexibility of spatial learning, we conducted a reversal spatial-learning task in which …

MaleElementary cognitive taskBiologyTask (project management)Eulamprus quoyiiCognitionbiology.animalAnimalsEcologyLizardFlexibility (personality)Association LearningCognitionLizardsSpatial cognitionbiology.organism_classificationAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Associative learningSpace PerceptionLinear ModelsAnimal BehaviourNew South WalesGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesReinforcement PsychologyLearning CurveCognitive psychologyBiology letters
researchProduct