1st Edition

Animal Behavior An Evolutionary Approach

Edited By Victor S. Lamoureux Copyright 2011
    320 Pages
    by Apple Academic Press

    320 Pages
    by Apple Academic Press

    This title includes a number of Open Access chapters.



    This book looks at a range of topics covering a variety of animals, including how macaques teach their offspring, how rats transmit avoidance behavior, how supplementary feeding of tree frogs affects their breeding behavior, and more. Studies in animal behavior can have far-reaching implications for animals and humans alike, such as how humans can improve conservation efforts, how to better protect animals—both in the wild and in captivity (zoos), and what can be learned about humans from animals, such as how the human brain and behaviors might work.

    Free-Ranging Macaque Mothers Exaggerate Tool-Using Behavior when Observed by Offspring
    Mouse Cognition-Related Behavior in the Open-Field: Emergence of Places of Attraction
    Altered Behavior and Digestive Outcomes in Adult Male Rats Primed with Minimal Colon Pain as Neonates
    Social Transmission of Avoidance Behavior under Situational Change in Learned and Unlearned Rats
    Molecular Variation at a Candidate Gene Implicated in the Regulation of Fire Ant Social Behavior
    Ultrasonic Communication in Rats: Can Playback of 50-kHz Calls Induce Approach Behavior?
    Supplementary Feeding Affects the Breeding Behavior of Male European Treefrogs (Hyla arborea)
    Mirror-Induced Behavior in the Magpie (Pica pica): Evidnce of Self-Recognition
    Precocious Locomotor Behavior Begins in the Egg: Development of Leg Muscle Patterns for Stepping in the Chick
    Perinatal Androgens and Adult Behavior Vary with Nestling Social System in Siblicidal Boobies
    Transcriptomic Profiling of Central Nervous System Regions in Three Species of Honey Bee during Dance Communication Behavior
    Plant Volatiles, Rather than Light, Determine the Nocturnal Behavior of a Caterpillar
    Risk and Ethical Concerns of Hunting Male Elephant: Behavioral and Physiological Assays of the Remaining Elephants
    Home Range Utilisation and Territorial Behavior of Lions (Panthera leo) on Karongwe Game Reserve, South Africa
    Introduced Mammalian Predators Induce Behavioral Changes in Parental Care in an Endemic New Zealand Bird
    Index

    Biography

    Professor Victor S. Lamoureux received his master’s degree in teaching biology and his PhD in biology from Binghamton University, the State University of New York, Binghamton, New York, USA. He is also an Adjunct Professor of Biology at Broome Community College in Binghamton, New York, USA. His research studies involve the ecology and overwintering behavior of the green frog, Rana clamitans.