Animal Behavior: An Evolutionary Approach |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 49
Page 28
... reared apart . If they developed similar behavior , it could not be because they were encouraged to do so by their parents and a shared home environment . This is why Jack Yufe and Oskar Stohr and others like them provide such valuable ...
... reared apart . If they developed similar behavior , it could not be because they were encouraged to do so by their parents and a shared home environment . This is why Jack Yufe and Oskar Stohr and others like them provide such valuable ...
Page 480
... reared apart , ( 2 ) siblings reared together , and ( 3 ) nonsiblings reared apart and ( 4 ) together . The foster pups were readily accepted by the adult females ( presumably because in nature the chance of litter substitutions ...
... reared apart , ( 2 ) siblings reared together , and ( 3 ) nonsiblings reared apart and ( 4 ) together . The foster pups were readily accepted by the adult females ( presumably because in nature the chance of litter substitutions ...
Page 481
... reared apart exhibit significantly less aggression to each other than do genetic strangers reared apart . All other combinations of sib- lings reared apart ( S.RA. ) are as ag- gressive to one another when they meet in an experimental ...
... reared apart exhibit significantly less aggression to each other than do genetic strangers reared apart . All other combinations of sib- lings reared apart ( S.RA. ) are as ag- gressive to one another when they meet in an experimental ...
Contents
NATURAL SELECTION | 5 |
Alternative Hypotheses | 11 |
Experimental Tests of Evolutionary Predictions | 17 |
Copyright | |
61 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ability activity adaptive adult alarm calls allele animal behavior anole ants aphids bees Behavioral Ecology benefits biological birds black-headed gull bluegill brain breeding butterfly cells Chapter colony Color competition cooperation copulate courtship cues cycle damselfly defense detect developmental display dominant effects eggs environment evolution evolutionary evolved example experience feeding female's fertilize Figure flies foraging gametes genes genetic genotype gulls habitat hive honeybee hormonal human hypothesis inclusive fitness individuals infanticide insects kin selection kittiwake larvae living male's males and females mate mechanisms moth nectar nervous system nest neural neurons offspring parental pattern pheromone Photograph physiological polyandry polygyny population potential predators prediction prey produce progeny rats reared receptive receptors relatively reproductive success response Science sensory sexual selection signals snakes social Sociobiology song sounds species sperm stimulation strategy survival territory testosterone toad traits wasp white-crowned sparrow wings workers young