51 Study Guide
51 Study Guide
Name___________________________ Period___________
Overview
Concept 51.1 Discrete sensory inputs can stimulate both simple and complex behaviors
2. What is ethology?
5. Who are the three ethologists who shared in a Nobel Prize for their work in 1973? We will
look at work by each of them.
taxis
10. Explain what is meant by a circadian clock and circadian rhythms. Identify two behaviors,
either plant or animal, that demonstrate a circadian rhythm. (You may need to refer to Chapter
49 or Chapter 36 for examples.)
12. Animals communicate in various ways. Discuss at least three specific examples using
different organisms.
14. Karl von Frisch studied European honeybees. What are the two types of dances that a
returning worker bee does, and what information does each dance convey? Use a labeled
sketch to describe each dance.
15. What are pheromones? Give three specific types of information that can be transmitted
through pheromones.
Concept 51.2 Learning establishes specific links between experience and behavior
16. What is the difference between innate and learned behavior? Give an example of each.
20. What special challenges did researchers face in order to return whooping cranes to the wild?
What would you have to wear if you worked with hatchlings? Why?
21. There are several types of learning. What occurs in spatial learning?
22. What are two types of associative learning? Which type did Ivan Pavlov use to get a dog to
salivate at the sound of a bell?
24. What is cognition? Give three examples of cognition in animal species; include at least one
bird behavior.
25. Many bird songs are learned during a critical period. What will happen if a white-crowned
sparrow does not hear the song of its species during this time?
Concept 51.3 Both genetic makeup and environment contribute to the development of behaviors
26. Based on cross-fostering and human twin studies, what are the two factors that contribute
significantly to behavior?
27. This concept looks at some very interesting ways that genetic changes affect behavior. Several
important case studies that show a genetic component to behavior are presented. Take time to
read and enjoy them. The study of voles and their mating behaviors is often discussed in other
science articles. To return to fruit fly mating, a single gene called fru controls male mating
behavior. If males lack a functional fru gene (short for fruitless), what happens?
And what occurs if females are genetically manipulated to express this gene?
Concept 51.4 Selection for individual survival and reproductive success can explain most behaviors
29. What is proposed by the optimal foraging theory? Explain it in terms of cost and benefit, and
cite two examples from your text.
30. To demonstrate that you understand the principle of optimal foraging, describe a food source
that you would not be likely to exploit.
promiscuity
monogamy
polygamy
polygyny
polyandry
32. Explain two factors that may be important in determining the evolution of these systems, and
apply each factor to a particular species.
33. Let’s return to an earlier idea. What is sexual selection? (Chapter 23)
34. There are two types of sexual selection. Explain each of them.
intersexual selection
intrasexual selection
35. What is agonistic behavior? Give one example of this behavior that is not in your book.
Concept 51.5 Inclusive fitness can account for the evolution of altruistic social behavior
36. What is altruism?
37. Explain the evolutionary advantage to a population of having members who exhibit altruistic
behavior.
38. Altruism may reduce the fitness of an individual—for example, by making that individual
more obvious to a predator. Explain this behavior using the concept of inclusive fitness.
39. Explain the logic behind geneticist J.B.S. Haldane’s comment that he would lay down his
life for two brothers or eight cousins.