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Bystander effects

Bystander effects. Ok, lots of support for winner and loser effects How about bystanders? What affect does seeing another win or lose have on YOUR chances of winning or losing? What does watching give you?. Swordtail fish.

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Bystander effects

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  1. Bystander effects • Ok, lots of support for winner and loser effects • How about bystanders? • What affect does seeing another win or lose have on YOUR chances of winning or losing? • What does watching give you?

  2. Swordtail fish • If you see an aggressive encounter, you can learn valuable information for the future. • Test for these effects with control where bystander could not see outcome of combat • Treatment where bystander could see but combatants couldn’t What happens when you now pit bystander against winner or loser?

  3. Outcomes • Where bystander could see outcome, tended to avoid contest with winner more than bystander that could not see contest. • AND not escalate as often,

  4. Outcomes • Bystanders that saw outcomes and those that did not, treated losers about the same way. • But length of aggressive encounter made a difference. • Initiated more against losers that left contest quickly.

  5. What does this mean? • Bystander can use information to its advantage. • Judges fighting skills of both combatants based on not only on who wins or loses but how escalated the fight becomes. • Future aggressive actions then affected by this information.

  6. Audience Effects • Here we are looking at how onlookers affect the outcome of the conflict. • Chimpanzees: Aggressor screams and victim screams. • In mild encounters, victims don’t scream any longer with or without audience • In severe encounters, victims scream longer and louder with an audience.

  7. Outcome • Who is in the audience makes a difference! • If there was an equal or higher ranking individual to the aggressor, was present. Why? intervenes and breaks up fight.

  8. Summary • In this case combatants seem aware of who is in the audience and adjust their behavior accordingly. • Area rich in research possibilities to see not just how they may adjust behavior but how audience might alter outcome. • Would you fight harder depending on who is watching??

  9. Aggression summary • Aggression behavior is over resources • Is linked with testosterone and various other hormones. • Can be modeled with game theory where outcome depends on value of the resource and the costs associated with trying to get that resource. • Outcomes often decided on physical advantage but also depends on how each combatant values the resource.

  10. Aggression summary • Can result in an “ordering” of society but not a peaceful one.

  11. “Pure behavior” • Before we move on to behavioral ecology, a few other behavioral categories to cover. • First of these is disease and animal behavior. (Chap 16). • As we will see with other “threats” to health and life, many animals have developed behaviors aimed at reducing their chances of catching diseases. • Here we will look at a few of them.

  12. Avoidance of disease • Avoidance of habitats -Tree frogs: were able to determine presence of snails (intermediate host of trematode parasite) and avoid laying eggs in these ponds.

  13. Avoidance of individuals • Bullfrogs: In tadpole stage, evidence that uninfected individuals preferred to associate with other uninfected ones, avoided inflected individuals. • How did they tell? • Seems chemical cues were used. • Others? Often see avoidance of “unhealthy” individuals. Part of the sexual test is a health check!

  14. Self - medication • Seems we are not the only ones who like to self medicate! • Two broad categories • 1) Preventative • 2) Therapeutic

  15. Preventative medicine • Many species use potentially anti-bacterial plant substances in their nests. • Starlings add fresh herbs – led to higher body weight of fledglings. • Many primate species eat clay, dirt, and rocks to reduce indigestion, as an antidiarrheal agent, absorb dangerous plant compounds

  16. Preventive medicine • “Anting” by birds and mammals: rubbing crushed ants on feathers and fur. Formic acid aids against tick infections • “Fur rubbing”: many primates rub fruits, leaves, and vines on their fur, which have antimicrobial effects.

  17. Therapeutic self-medication • Use of leaves by Chimpanzees against tapeworms. • Other primate do the same. • Dogs and cats eating grass.

  18. Summary • Growing evidence that many species self medicate, • Obvious evolutionary advantage to individuals who “discover” the use of these medicines. • Often with similar substances we commonly use today. In fact, starting to try and identify others that are being used that we might be able to use!

  19. Next: Personalities! • Used to consider people who thought animals had “personalities” were them selves “personalities”!!! • But more and more research is demonstrating that indeed there are individual differences in behaviors or personalities. • Not surprising in that we have been talking about natural variation in most behaviors.

  20. How do personalities differ? • One common way is Boldness vs Shyness • Boldness: tendency to take risk in familiar and unfamiliar situations • Shyness: reluctance to take such risks or reluctance to engage in unfamiliar activities at all.

  21. Why would we find both? • IF we think of evolution as the survival of the fittest, often hard to see why we would have a range of any trait. • IF we consider survival of the adequate, then in some cases being shy has advantages and some cases being bold.

  22. Evidence for boldness and shyness • Do we really find these personality differences? • Pumpkinseed sunfish: • Trapped vs seined • Trapped bolder willing to investigate

  23. Were they? • Trapped adjusted more quickly

  24. Guppies • Boldness and predator inspection: • Found there were consistent differences • Always bold • Always shy • Bold are colorful

  25. Why be bold? • It seems to impress the females!

  26. Is she really?? • Will mate with bold males regardless of color

  27. Other than boldness and shyness? • What other traits vary regarding personalities? • Gosling (1998) found five aggregate traits in Hyenas: • 1) assertiveness • 2) excitability • 3) Human-directed agreeableness • 4) sociability • 5) curiosity

  28. Octopus?? • Turns out they have personalities! • 1) Active vs inactive • 2) anxious vs calm • 3) bold vs inhibited.

  29. Ruffs • Personalities related to physical differences. • “independent” males vs “Satellite” males • Dark and larger vs light and smaller • Independent set up territories. • Satellites needed to attract females.

  30. Last: Coping styles • Related to bold and shy but relative to how they respond to stress in the environment. • Proactive vs reactive • Proactive: likely to remove negative stimuli from their environment • Reactive; more likely to hide from new negative stimuli

  31. Lab rats • Can breed for proactive vs reactive • Proactive more likely to show aggression toward intruder, reactive will hide • Proactive rats will try to remove or neutralize a negative stimulus, reactive ones will just avoid the area where the stimulus is.

  32. Summary • Good evidence that personality differences exist: boldness/shyness most studied

  33. Fear • Recognize it in humans • TV, Movies, Books, etc. play upon our fears! • We love to be scared!! • But what about other animals? • Often reluctant to recognize it: too anthropocentric!

  34. Fear • Talked about aggression as a behavior • Widely accepted as a behavior of animals, no anthropocentric overtones.

  35. But why does aggressive behavior work? • Needs reciprocal reaction or behavior! • Call it submissive behavior • But it is FEAR!

  36. Intraspecific conflicts • Why does one win and another lose? • What makes the one back down? …..Fear If not…. fight to the death!

  37. Imagine if someone was trying to kill you! • Would we call it submissive behavior?

  38. What is it? • No other way to describe it except… Fear!

  39. One of the most prevalent behaviors • Considering what we have talked about regarding aggression and what we will talk about regarding predation… • Fear is probably THE one most likely behavior an organism will experience! • Also, as you will see, is probably the most influential behavioral force in ecology

  40. So fear exists • Many felt it was too anthropocentric to ascribe fear to animals: • Talked about “escape” and “avoidance behaviors” • But these are the behaviors that are produced by fear.

  41. Today? • More acceptable to talk about fear in animals • Still not mainstream • No mention of it in most behavioral texts. • Yet whole chapters devoted to aggression! • So lets look at fear as a behavior

  42. Definitions • Two important concepts regarding fear (from psychology) • 1) motivation • 2) personality

  43. Motivation • Fear and anxiety: emotional states that are induced by the perception of any actual danger (fear state) or potential danger (anxiety state) and which are characterized as a feeling of insecurity

  44. Personality • Fearfulness: personality or temperament trait defining the general susceptibility of an individual to react to potentially threatening situations. (Just how fearful or anxious you will be)

  45. Five basic questions • Survival function “What good is it” • Immediate stimuli “what causes it” • Development “How does it develop” • Phylogeny “How does it change” • Ecological function “How does it affect others”

  46. Evolutionary advantage? • Fear definitely has survival value to wild animals! • Most important threats of injury and death individual encounters are from predators and competing/attacking conspecifics. • Defensive reactions increase the chances of survival. • If you don’t fear your predators, your dead!!

  47. What causes fear response? • Classic is there is a stimulus associated with behavior • What is nature of frightening stimuli? • Gray in 1979 classified fear-producing stimuli into 5 subdividsion

  48. Subdivisions of fear stimuli • 1) dangers related to evolutionary history • 2) dangers related to novelty • 3) stimuli you learn are related to danger • 4) Intensity of the stimuli • 5) stimuli arising from interactions with conspecifics.

  49. 1. Evolutionary history • “Innate” fear responses • Usually specific stimuli that are related to ecology of species, many cross species boundaries • Physical dangers: fear of heights, fear of darkness, fear of dead things. • Fear of predators: silhouettes of hawks illicit responses in nestlings

  50. 2. Novelty • Apart from established innate fear stimuli • Exposing animals to a novel object has been found to be most potent stimulus leading to negative emotional response. • Behavioral reaction similar to that induced by negative stimuli such as electric footshocks! • Animals are inherently afraid of NEW things!

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