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5.4: Ethology

  • Page ID
    5029
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    Ethology is the study of animal behavior. Don't confuse it with "ethnology" the study of "ethnos", ethnicities, the comparative study of human cultures. I think videos are the best way to get a sense of both primate behavior and our place in the primate continuum. Captivity is a bad place to study behavior because the behavior has evolved in a certain environment, to solve problems in that environment, and you can't expect to see natural behavior outside of a natural setting, and I hate zoos because they justify the destruction of natural habit. But, some of these psychological experiments are useful to blur the line between human and non-human primate.

    Note

    Reintroducing Lemurs into Madagascar (7 part series with John Cleese)

    2014 "Inside Ape Minds"

    Behavioral Ecology

    • Baboon adaptations to the savanna
    • Safety in numbers, boa constrictor eats Purús red howler monkey
    • The Monkey and the Snake: How the Primate Brain Reacts to Serpents

    Primate Culture

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    WATCH ORANGUTAN BEHAVIOR

    • Orangutans plan ahead and share trip plans a day before leaving: Wild Apes Communicate Their Travel Plans for Tomorrow
    • Chimp vs. Children
    • Capuchin Monkey tool use:

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{2}\)

    Watch Chimpanzee's from Bossou tool use

    Article on social transmission of tool use, Sonso chimp leaf sponges

    Ape Language?

    Apes don't speak but they can learn sign language and symbolic keyboard languages. Book on Koko, a gorilla who was taught sign language

    Ape Music?

    Language is often defined as an exclusively human form of communication, but the line between human language and animal communication is not so sharp, as we see with Koko, Kanzi, and the dozens of other apes taught to use languages. Can the same be said about music? Gorillas make up little songs when they are eating. When we find regional variations of sounds produced by chimps, can we say they are like musical styles?

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{3}\)

    Watch Chimpanzee's from Bossou clip leaves because they like the sound it makes, and they are bored, frustrated, or want to attract a mate (you need to turn the sound up on the video to hear it)

    • Review of Chimpanzee drumming styles
    • Article on Gorilla eating songs

    Theory of Mind

    Theory of mind refers to an individual's ability to think about what other individuals are thinking. The term has various definitions which can range from mirroring, copying another's actions, to mentalizing, predicting how another will react. Humans are definitely the best at this, but other animals demonstrate this behavior, including dogs, dolphins, elephants, some birds, and of course primates. Dogs are actually better at recognizing human pointing than chimpanzees.

    * John Rubin "The Gap Between Humans and Apes"

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{4}\)

    Watch a lecture by Tetsuro Matsuzawa, "Mind Reading" in Chimpanzees

    Skim Charles Darwin's1872 "The Expressions of the Emotions in Man and Animals", especially look at the pictures:

    1872_Expression_F1142_fig18.jpg

    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\) - "Chimpanzee disappointed and sulky. Drawn from life by Mr. Wood."

    Watch an amazing test of chimp short term memory:

    * Apes and mirrors:

    * Ape self-awareness:

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{5}\)

    Read an article on contagious yawning in chimpanzees

    Read an article on Chimp attitudes towards death

    The three clips are arranged from agonistic (aggression) to affiliative (grooming and sex).

    Agonistic Behavior

    Agonistic means "aggressive", but it is usually more bluff and intimidation than physical violence. Natural selection is going to generally select for conflict resolution that avoids members of the same species injuring each other. Many primates are aggressive, but they don't kill each other very often. They learn hierarchies to avoid injury. But when push comes to shove, primates make bad pets.

    • Watch a Violent Chimp Attack

    Affiliative Behavior

    Affiliative means "social". There is a push and pull of conflict and resolution in primate societies. Primates fight to see who's on top, and then make-up to keep the group together. Agonistic behavior helps to establish dominance hierarchies, and is usually followed by reconciliation, a kind of affiliative behavior. The most common primate affiliative behavior is grooming. We tend to think of grooming as keeping clean, but its main function for primates is social bonding.

    • Read about Bonobos comfort each other
    • James Fowler research on how humans chose their friends based on genetic closeness

    K-selection vs. r-selection

    If you say something is r-selected or K-selected, you are comparing a species or group of species to another, and comparing their strategies for growing their population. The terms come from variables in a math equation that describes how populations grow:

    \[\frac{dN}{dt} = rN \left( \dfrac{K-N}{K}\right)\]

    where

    • \(N\) = the population density,
    • \(r\) = the reproductive rate,
    • \(K\) = the carrying capacity.

    r-selected animals have plenty of habitat to grow into, so they crank out lots of kids and hope a few survive. K-selected animals have limitations on their resources, so they have few infants per birth, and longer birth spacing, and invest more parental care in making sure they survive. K-selection follows the human phylogenetic continuum closely. Vertebrates are more K-selected than invertebrates. Mammals are more K-selected than other vertebrates. Primates are more K-selected than other mammals. Anthropoids are more K-selected than prosimians. Hominoids are more K-selected than monkeys. Humans are one of the most K-selected species on the planet.

    * Jane Goodall on chimpanzee motherhood:

    * Verhulst equation of population growth or logistic growth equation

    Vocabulary

    • altruism
    • language
    • violence
    • sexual dimorphism
    • sexuality
    • anthropomorphism

    This page titled 5.4: Ethology is shared under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Arnie Daniel Schoenberg via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.