Exam 12: Antipredator Behavior
Exam 1: Principles of Animal Behavior15 Questions
Exam 2: The Evolution of Behavior16 Questions
Exam 3: Hormones and Neurobiology16 Questions
Exam 4: Molecular Gene Tics and Development15 Questions
Exam 5: Learning16 Questions
Exam 6: Cultural Transmission16 Questions
Exam 7: Sexual Selection16 Questions
Exam 8: Mating Systems16 Questions
Exam 9: Kinship16 Questions
Exam 10: Cooperation16 Questions
Exam 11: Foraging17 Questions
Exam 12: Antipredator Behavior15 Questions
Exam 13: Communication16 Questions
Exam 14: Habitat Selection, Territoriality, and Migration16 Questions
Exam 15: Aggression16 Questions
Exam 16: Play15 Questions
Exam 17: Animal Personalities16 Questions
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Which of the following is NOT a feature of the chemical defense system of bombardier beetles?
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Correct Answer:
C
Mobbing refers to an antipredator tactic in which prey:
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Correct Answer:
D
Which of the following is NOT a strategy for avoiding predators?
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Obtain a copy of Mirza and colleagues' (2001) paper entitled "Differential Responses of Male and Female Red Swordtails to Chemical Alarm Cues" (Journal of Fish Biology, vol. 59, pp. 716-728). Discuss this paper in terms of: (1) proximate mechanisms involved in the detection of predation risk, and (2) within-population differences in antipredator behavior.
(Essay)
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Read Chapman and colleagues' (2007) paper, "Early Interactions with Adults Mediate the Development of Predator Defenses in Guppies" (Behavioral Ecology, vol. 19, pp. 87-93). How do the authors' results illuminate the powerful influence that early life social environments can have on the development of behavioral and morphological traits? Generate at least two hypotheses regarding the environmental conditions under which such developmental plasticity would be adaptive or maladaptive.
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When terrestrial predation pressures from snakes and wasps are strong, the tadpoles of red-eyed tree frogs should be selected to:
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following represents a direct fitness consequence of learning about predators?
(Multiple Choice)
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Describe how natural selection shapes predator inspection behavior and the capacity to learn about predators in the example of the Dorset and Gwynedd minnows (Interpopulational Differences in Minnow Approach Behavior section of the chapter). Next, read the paper by Archard and colleagues (2012) titled "Correlated Behaviour and Stress Physiology in Fish Exposed to Different Levels of Predation Pressure" (Functional Ecology, vol. 26, pp. 637-645). Detail the findings of this paper, particularly with respect to how natural selection might have shaped exploratory behavior, activity levels, and stress responsiveness in populations derived from areas with different levels of predation risk. Are there any connections between stress hormones and learning? If so, develop at least two hypotheses exploring how selection on stress responsiveness might explain the results of the study on Dorset and Gwynedd minnows.
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When should natural selection most strongly favor genetically coded predator recognition mechanisms?
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Which of the following statements does NOT relate to antipredator behavior and defense against snakes in California ground squirrels?
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Which of the following hypotheses has NOT been proposed to explain tail flagging behavior?
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Vigilance entails keeping an eye out for predators at the expense of some other activity and qualifies as an antipredator tactic. Obtain a copy of Bednekoff's (1997) paper, "Mutualism among Safe, Selfish Sentinels: A Dynamic Game" (American Naturalist, vol. 150, pp. 373-392). Also, obtain a copy of Wright and colleagues' (2001) paper entitled "Safe Selfish Sentinels in a Cooperative Bird" (Journal of Animal Ecology, vol. 70, pp. 1070-1079). How do these two papers integrate what you learned in Chapter 10 (Cooperation) with concepts of antipredator behavior?
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In 1973, Van Valen proposed what has been dubbed the Red Queen hypothesis, which describes, in part, the evolutionary arms races that occur between predator and prey. This moniker was derived from Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass, in which the Red Queen says to Alice that "it takes all the running you can do to keep in the same place." That is, predator and prey are forced to evolve more complex hunting and antipredator tactics, respectively, but neither can better its opponent. With this in mind, read Bergstrom and Lachmann's (2003) paper, "The Red King Effect: When the Slowest Runner Wins the Coevolutionary Race" (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, vol. 100, pp. 593-598). Contrast the Red Queen and the Red King effects in terms of (1) the types of relationships that favor each effect, and (2) the rate of evolutionary change inherent in the arms race.
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If differences in antipredator behavior exist between two populations of the same species inhabiting different environments, then we could conclude that:
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