Behaviour and ecology- Davies
Semelparity
'big bang' reproduction, where animals reproduce once with a large effort and then die e.g brown antechinus, mayflies, pacific salmon
Proximate
'how' questions, so how the physiology of an organism causes it to behave in a certain way. Includes ontogeny and mechanical.
Ultimate
'why' questions, so why an animal presently has a behaviour due to the process of natural selection and its evolutionary history. Includes adaptive and phylogenetic questions.
egg mimicry reduces host rejection
Darwin hypothesis for parasite egg mimicry
selfish herd theory where frogs surround a pond with a snake. Frogs would aim to minimise their zone of danger.
Hamilton's frogs
conflict between siblings in present and later broods (weaning conflict often in seals)
Interbrood conflict
conflict between siblings in the same brood due to them having a lower r relative to each other than to themselves
Intrabrood conflict
behaviour of an optimally foraging individual in a heterogenous environment (curve of diminishing return)
Marginal value theorem (MVT)
incorrect measurements, mis-identification of factors, organism may not optimally forage (mal-adaptation, evolutionary lag, other factor)
Problems with optimization
Functional (adaptive), mechanical, phylogenetic (evolutionary history), ontogeny (development)
Tinbergen's 4 questions to investigate the behaviour of an organism
egg mimicry convergently evolved with host egg to reduce predation
Wallace hypothesis for egg mimicry
Game theory
a payoff matrix theory used to determine, which strategy or mixture of strategies will be evolutionarily stable, preventing another deviant strategy from doing better
where eggs are laid at different times, incubation begins at different time, results in some hatching sooner
asynchronous hatching
study of how the interaction between ecology, including the abiotic and biotic environment, and evolution, can result in specific animal behaviours
behavioural ecology
Epideictic behaviour
behavioural term coined by Wynne Edwards to refer to flocking behaviour that he suggested may be used in order for birds to census the population and adjust reproduction accordingly (due to physiological mechanism)
Village Weaver birds
bird species that were translocated by humans approx 200 years ago from a highly parasitised area in Africa, to the islands of Hispanola and Mauritius where parasitism was not found.
Collared flycatchers
bird used to calculate costs of reproduction. Found that mortality not affected, but when clutch size larger, birds laid fewer eggs the following year.
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs)
case in which sibling rivalry is further increased and would predict further aggression
males can be related or unrelated
composition of male take over groups of 2
males usually related
composition of male take over groups of 3-4
untreated, extra chick, extra egg, induced bird to lay extra egg
conditions used by Heany and Monaghan
states that a larger group will reduce the total number of attacks due to the prey confusing the predator and reducing focus on an individual
confusion effect
states that as group number goes up, despite total attacks increasing, individual risk of attack should decrease (1/n). Only if attacks don't increase by nx
dilution effect
irradiated one male so no eggs fertilized would hatch and then varied mating order with normal male, second male received 90% of paternity
double mating experiment
(p/y) small so adult mortality low and juvenile mortality high
equation conditions that would allow semelparity to evolve
N + (2P/y)
equation showing how many young a sexual semelparous animal needs to produce in order to equal the success of an iteroparous animal that produces N yound each year
lost egg signatures, low variation in whole population, low variation between individuals, reduced uniformity in clutch appearance (indicated not founder effect)
findings in egg appearance of village weaver birds that were moved
Brambling
highly discriminating host, who also has very recognisable egg signatures
Dunnock
host who is early in evolutionary arms race and has not got very strong defences
individual flexible assessment, genetic predisposition
hypotheses for how individuals determine which strategy to use in the ESS
dilution, confusion, synchrony in time, selfish herd, group defence, vigilance
hypotheses for the advantages of group living with respect to defence from predation
evolutionary lag, hidden cost to parents
hypotheses for why some animals don't produce an optimal clutch size even if they can successfully raise more when experimentally manipulated
Testing Darwin's and Wallace's hypotheses
introduced mimetic or non-mimetic eggs into reed warbler nest. Found equal predation rates, but 70% non-mimetic eggs rejected compared to only 3% mimetic eggs
infanticide a consequence of mammalian stable bisexual social system and not a cause
key finding about infanticide and social systems by Lukas and Huchard
reproductive skew
main problem with analysing average reproductive success
larger offspring produced, adults take longer to mature before reproducing, smaller brood
main results of Reznick's translocation experiment from area with high adult mortality to area with high juvenile mortality
multi-male and ovulation signals, multi-male and concealed ovulation, monogamy and concealed ovulation (prairie vole)
major transitions likely with evolution of concealed ovulation. Transitions may provide support for both hypotheses at different points
Nature pattern match
method used by Stoddard et al to compare egg signatures on host and mimic eggs and to determine, which features on an egg made the pattern a good signature.
Central place foraging model
model using MVT where birds will leave central nest or roost to forage at more distant locations
260
number of species compared by Lukas and Huchard
40min
optimal copulation time followed by most male yellow dungflies
Tangent to the curve
point on curve at which optimal values of both factors will be found. It is the greatest gradient
bisexual stable group, infanticide improves male success, female counterstrategy (paternal dilution), sperm competition, loss of infanticide
potential process of infanticide evolution and loss in mammalian species
Killifish (juvenile predator), Cichlid (adult predator)
predatory fish involved in Reznick's translocation experiment
female self-deception, monogamy associated with concealed ovulation
predictions if Alexander's and Noonan's hypothesis were true
multi-male group associated with concealed ovulation
predictions if Sarah Hrdy's hypothesis were true
species may not be independent samples as share a common ancestor, order that traits evolved unknown
problem with tabulating species traits simply
monitoring of nest, waits until ready to lay, removal of 1 host egg, rapid laying
process of cuckoo egg laying
siblicide, infanticide, suicide
progression of events that may occur in parent-offspring conflict, but later stages hardly ever reached
unfamiliar scent, pathological aggression, males have short tenure so killing young will make females receptive sooner
proximate and ultimate hypotheses for male lion infanticide
pheromones, cub suckling shared, male cubs of similar age to form fraternal take over groups
proximate and ultimate hypotheses for oestrus synchrony in female lions
isolated groups, whole groups die out
rare conditions that may result in group selection
when calculate gains (number chicks surviving) and losses (adult mortality) then maximum lifetime reproductive success lower than theoretical peak
reason why clutch size often lower than theoretical optimum
Alex Kacelnik
scientist examining starling central foraging to see if birds were optimising foraging time and load. Predicted that optimal load value would increase with increased distance from the feeding platform
Hogstedt
scientist who calculated optimal clutch size (not average) depending on experimental manipulation of magpie clutches. Initial clutch size was noted. Found that experimental optimum matched initial size.
Rebecca Kilner
scientist who determined that Linnet chicks with redder gapes would be fed more by parents. Honest indicator of hunger as blood is diverted away from digestive system.
Shizuka
scientist who examined American coot brood adjustment strategies. Found that after critical day 10 period, switched from a selective starvation strategy to a brood survival one. Coots favoured younger chick, which received more food. Older received more tousles. Optimal strategy may vary temporally.
Canestrari
scientist who found that Carrion crows can benefit from parasitism when predation risk greater, as cuckoo does not evict all eggs and will produce a repellent secretion. Fitness increase only found when predation cost outweighs parasite detection benefit
Sarah Hrdy
scientist who hypothesised that concealed ovulation has evolved in order to reduce infanticide, since males are not certain if they have mated with the female during oestrus
Geoff Parker
scientist who investigated the ESS for male yellow dungfly waiting times, determined that copulation time and egg fertilization followed a curve of diminishing returns and determined that males copulated for an optimal time. Also performed double mating experiment to show that 2nd male had paternity advantage.
David Reznick, 1990
scientist who manipulated the life history of guppies by moving fish between streams containing different predators
David Lack
scientist who not only proposed idea of optimal clutch size as increasing individual fitness, but also suggested selective starvation hypothesis. Often implemented in asynchronous broods where natural brood hierarchy in place.
David Lack
scientist who produced evidence against group theory by analysing the optimal clutch size of great tits. Found from experimental manipulation that experimental optimum generally matched observed. However observed was slightly lower.
Wynne Edwards
scientist who proposed the group selection theory mainly in terms of the population regulation hypothesis, where altruistic groups would outcompete selfish groups
Naomi Langmore
scientist who recorded the songs of the cuckoo parasite chick and the resident chick of the Fairy-Wren. Found that the parasite was able to mimic the song of the host very accurately in shape and frequency.
Mike Finnie
scientist who studied parental control of food allocation in yellow-billed hornbills. When parent in the nest, food allocation was equal and very few attacks on the smaller chick. When out of nest larger received more food and attacked the smaller.
Heithaus
scientist who studied the puzzling foraging behaviour of dugongs who appeared not to forage optimally. Found that when higher Tiger Shark predation, would use less productive edge zones compared to the more productive interiors.
Rob Magrath
scientist who tested selective starvation hypothesis in artifical 4 chick blackbird clutches. Asynchronous did better when food poor, but synchronous did slightly better when food plentiful, maybe due to reduce sibling rivalry
Tore Slagsvold
scientist who transplanted great tit chicks or blue tit chicks into the others' nest. Larger chick did better than smaller. For brood parasite to do well needs to lay in nest where chick larger than host, but egg has to be smaller
Trivers
scientist who used a model of parental investment against relatedness to show that there could be a zone of conflict between offspring and parent. Offspring optimal parental care is greater than parental optimum.
Hinde
scientist who used canaries to look at maternal effect of androgen deposition in eggs. Found parents controlled food provisioning by depositing different androgen levels and then responding to begging. Begging intensity influenced by hormones.
Craig Packer, 1991
scientist who used paternity testing on lions to access hypotheses on male take over groups
Stoddard
scientist who used tetrachromeric analysis to compare the host and parasitic egg. Found that background colour mimicry was better when host was more highly discriminatory.
Visser and Lessells
scientists who calculated the costs of reproduction to great tits in terms of adult mortality when experimentally manipulated clutch size. Found mortality increased as clutch increased.
Richard Alexander and Katharine Noonan
scientists who hypothesised that concealed ovulation has evolved as a means of encouraging mate guarding and paternal care. If female shows no signals, then males that remain with female may be more certain of paternity.
Ghalambor and Martin
scientists who investigated risk-taking in parental care in northern and southern hemispheric birds. Southern responded more strongly to risks to themselves whereas northern responded more to risk to offspring. Reflected in different clutch sizes and chances of adult survival.
Heany and Monaghan
scientists who manipulated nests of common terns who usually laid 2 eggs and then calculated average no. fledged
Lukas and Huchard, 2014
scientists who tested hypotheses for the evolution of infanticide in mammals using phylogenetic comparative studies.
Krebs and Davies
scientists who used a comparative study of Rallidae to look at the evolution of chick ornamentation. Appeared that ornamentation correlated with increased polygamy and clutch size so may have evolved as method of sibling rivalry. Supported by other study where more ornamented chicks fed more by parents
refinement of dilution effect, risk not evenly allocated, individuals associated with a larger domain of danger will have greater risk of attack. Animals should aim to reduce this by clustering closer together
selfish herd
low complexity (few features may reduce noise), large spacing, low interclutch variation
signature features of the highly discriminatory Brambling
Obligate siblicide (canism)
situation where one sibling always kills the other. Black headed vultures-maybe evolutionary lag as environment now not so productive. May be an insurance against other egg not hatching.
Cooperation
social behaviour found in lion take over groups, where males work together to increase their collective success. Group more likely to succeed in take over and have longer tenure.
humans, hanuman langurs, orangutans
species with concealed ovulation
bonobos, chimpanzees
species with conspicuous oestrus swelling
gorillas, gibbons
species with slight ovulation signals
clutch size variation, brood adjustment (selective starvation/brood survival)
strategies employed in optimising lifetime reproductive success when food supplies variable
all eggs hatch simultaneously
synchronous hatching
Comparative study
technique used in testing hypotheses where experimental manipulation is difficult or unethical. For example, when investigating the evolution of ovulation signals in primates.
Egg rejection threshold
theoretical calculation of strategy that should be deployed by a host when faced with a particular prevalence of parasite. Do not want to reject own egg, but do not want to miss a parasite, which would result in clutch loss anyway
Hawk-dove model
theoretical model of aggression (display and fighting) in a simplified population, where individuals only use one strategy
time spent travelling and collecting, load size
trade off when foraging
encouraging mate guarding and parental care in males, reducing risk of infanticide
two main hypotheses for evolution of concealed ovulation in primates
dishonesty physically impossible, high cost of signal shows true quality, signal shows true need
ways of maintaining an honest display when competing
Iteroparity
where animals reproduce repeatedly, surviving to the next season e.g elephants
Infanticide
where males kill the young of females in the group, usually after a male take over. An example of a spiteful social behaviour.
larger eggs than host are more likely to be rejected
why a small egg laid?
extra meal? improve incubation efficiency
why does cuckoo remove a host egg since they cannot count?
host will reject only one egg but will not generally reject only one chick
why not remove all the host eggs?
host much more alert to egg appearance if see a parasite
why such rapid laying?