From Last Class

Ethology

Species-specific behaviours

Homologies

Analogies

Non-verbal expressions

Emotional expression


Sociobiology

Social systems in animals

Behaviours interacting with other behaviours

Compare and contrast species

Dr. E.O. Wilson



Mating Patterns

Polygyny

Polyandry

Monogamy

Polygynandry

Who gets to mate?

Parental investment?


Polygyny

Fairly common in mammals

Females have high parental investment

Males have low parental investment

Not all males get to mate



Polyandry

Very uncommon in mammals

Often in non-mammalian species

Females have low parental investment

Males have high parental investment



Monogamy

Equal parental investment

Little sexual dimorphism

Seen in:

Cheaters



Polygynadry

Rare

Bonobo chimpanzees and common chimpanzees

Advantages?

Consortship



Incest

Mating with a close relative

Evolutionary disadvantage

Incest avoidance techniques

Chimpanzees


Aggression

Fighting and threats of fighting

Fighting to mate


Territoriality


Dominance within a colony


Helping

Cooperation

Altruism



Sociobiology and Humans

Consider:

Can sociobiology be applied to humans?

Deterministic Fallacy

Naturalistic Fallacy

Analogies


Some Hypotheses About Humans

Communal living

Nepotism

Monogamy and Polygyny

Men are more violent than women

Avoidance of incest


Chapter 4 In Short Form

Evolution is about adaptation

Levels of adaptation

Ultimate and proximal causes of behaviour

Genetic drift

Ethology

Species specific behaviour

Homologies and analogies

Non-verbal expressions

Emotional expressions

Sociobiology

Mating patterns and parental investment

Aggression

Helping

Sociobiology and humans


For Your Consideration...

In species in which males fight over the right to mate with females, natural selection tends to make the males larger than the females. What limits the eventual size of the males? In other words, what selection pressures balance selection for increased size? Hint: think about energy requirements.

 

Wolves have evolved a complex communication system in their howls. What use might this serve?

 

What social behaviours can help prevent the spread of dangerous recessive genes in a population? If an animal is only considered to be "successfully" if it passes its genes on to the next generation, how did altruism every evolve?


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