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ANB 218a 2015


Fundamentals of Animal Behavior

Fall 2015



Instructor: Jeff Schank (original instructor: Don Owings)

Email: jcschank@ucdavis.edu

Office: 268D Young Hall

Phone: 752-6332

Office Hours: Tuesday and Thursday 10:30-11:50 and by appointment


Course description: This is the first of a two-quarter sequence. ANB 218B will be offered Winter 2014, and led by Andy Sih, Environmental Science and Policy.  The goal of this course is to sample current and traditional topics in the field of animal behavior. You will learn about the basic phenomena, concepts, and theoretical approaches of animal behavior, but no two-quarter sequence can provide the entire breadth and depth of animal behavior.


When:

Speakers:  TW: 4:30 PM to 6:20 PM

Discussion:  TBA

Adjustments: Due to the nature of this course adjustments may be required for some speakers and discussion.


Where:

Lectures: 145 Young Hall (with possible exceptions)

Discussion: 145 Young Hall


Grading:

40% from position papers and leading discussion (you will write 3 papers and lead or co-lead 2 discussions), 15% from review papers on 3 of the position papers (you will write 3 review papers on 3 of the discussion papers), 20% participation in discussions, 25% final exam


Course Website:

http://www.agent-based-models.com/

Look under the “Courses” menu.


Course details:

(1) As noted below, different topics will be the responsibility of different speakers. Each speaker has been asked to lecture on the assigned topic, and then moderate a 1-hour (when possible) with a student-led discussion on the topic.

(2) This means that you, the students, will be leading the discussions (this task will rotate among you).  Because of the number of people registered, there will often be co-discussants. Please be thinking about what topic you would prefer.

(3) Each speaker will provide readings prior to the beginning of his/her lectures. Please prepare for lectures by reading that material.

(4) Each speaker will assign the associated discussion topic at the beginning of his/her lectures.

(5) Preparation for each discussion will involve

   
   (a) reviewing the lecture and reading material so that
       you can lead the discussion, but everyone else is expected
       to join in (this is the main part of the 20% participant 
       discussion);

   (b) for a subset of you each time, you will write a 
       short position paper on the topic (no longer than 2 
       single-spaced pages)that you will circulate to all 
       parties to read exactly one week  after the topic is 
       discussed. You should look into additional reading 
       and include references for these papers.  You will send 
       it using the class email list; and

  (c)  A subset of you, will write a short review of the 
       position paper (between 1/2 and 1 page 
       spaced pages).  The review will briefly
       discuss the the strong points of the position 
       paper and the weak points (e.g., "I think the author
       should have included more about X", or "I do not 
       think that topic X is fundamental to the topic."
       or "I think that that X is better, explained or 
       articulated as this...").  The short review will 
       be due 3 days after you receive the discussion paper.
       You will send out your review using the
       class email list.

 


CLASS SCHEDULE – FALL, 2015

Fundamentals of Animal Behavior (ANB/PSC 218A – Schank Instructor)

Lecture times – MW 4:30–6:20 PM; Discussion times – F 2:00–3:00 PM


1. Thursday – Sep 24  – Organize  Jeff Schank

2. Tuesday – Sep 29 –  Communication, Gail Patricelli

Readings
        (1) Animal Signals: Models and Terminology
        (2) What do animal signals mean?
        (3) The central importance of information 
            in studies of animal communication
        (4) Information and Communication

   Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio/assignments:power_point_icon pdf_icon  (28.9 mb)

3. Thursday – Oct. 1 – Communication,  Gail Patricelli

    Readings
        (1) Avian psychology and communication 
        (2) Complex signal function: developing 
            a framework of testable hypotheses

   Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio:power_point_icon pdf_icon 

5. Tuesday – Oct. 6 –  Communication,  Gail Patricelli

    Readings 
         (1) The cost of honesty and the fallacy 
             of the handicap principle
     Discussion – Hannes Schraft, 
     – Dicussion Leader(s):
   Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio:pdf_icon  assignment word

6. Thursday  Oct 8 – Animal Cognition and Learning – Dick Coss

   Readings
         (1) Burrhus F. Skinner: Radical Behaviorism
         (2) The Structure of Learning
         (3) Précis of How monkeys see the world
         (4) I. P. Pavlov: Classical Conditioning
         (5) Recognition of Heterospecific Alarm Vocalizations by
             bonnet Macaques (Macaca radiate)
         (6) Effect of spatial context on the mobbing reaction
             of pied flycatchers to a predator model
   Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio: power_point_icon 
      Discussion –
        – Dicussion Leader(s): Group Discussion

7. Tuesday Oct. 13 – Behavioral endocrinology, Tom Hahn

    Readings
     (1) Hormonal control and evolution of alternative 
         male phenotypes: generalizations of models of 
         sexual differentiation
     (2) The role of sex steroids in the acquisition
         and production of birdsong
     (3) The organizational-activational hypothesis as the
         foundation for a unified theory of sexual 
         differentiation of all mammalian tissues
     (4) Differential effects of global versus local 
         testosterone on singing behavior and its 
         underlying neural substrate
Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio:pdf_icon Lecture 1 

8. Thursday Oct. 15 – Behavioral endocrinology, Tom Hahn

     Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio:pdf_icon Lecture 2 
     Discussion – 
     – Discussion Leader(s): Group Discussion

9. Tuesday Oct. 20 – Behavioral Schedules, Tom Hahn

    Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio:pdf_icon  part 1, part 2

10. Thursday Oct 22 – Behavioral Schedules, Tom Hahn

    Readings
     (1) Experimental ‘Jet Lag’ Inhibits Adult 
         Neurogenesis and Produces Long-Term Cognitive 
         Deficits in Female Hamsters
     (2) Circadian clocks and the measurement of 
         daylength in seasonal reproduction
     (3) Organization of vertebrate annual cycles:
         implications for control mechanisms
     Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio: pdf_icon   
     Discussion – – Discussion Leader(s): Melissa Jones

11. Tuesday Oct 27 – Genomics, Brian Trainor

     Readings
        (1) Natural variations in maternal care are 
            associated with estrogen
            receptor expression and estrogen sensitivity 
            in the medial preoptic area.
        (2) Serotonin transporter genotype x construction 
            stress interaction in rats.
        (3) Gene expression profiles in the brain predict
            behavior in individual honey bees.

     Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio:pdf_icon  
     Discussion – 
     – Dicussion Leader(s):Alex Kowalczyk

12. Thursday Oct 29 – Sensory behavior,  Jamilynn Poletto

    Readings
        (1) Neural Processing, Perception, and Behavioral 
            Responsesto Natural Chemical Stimuli by Fish 
            and Crustaceans
        (2) Conservation physiology
            
    Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio: power_point_icon  
    Discussion – 
    – Discussion Leader(s):Hannes Schraft

13. Wednesday Nov 4 – Conservation and Animal Behavior, John Eadie (6:00–7:50 PM)

     Readings
        (1) A reassessment of the interface between
            conservation and behaviour
        (2) Integrating animal behavior and conservation
            biology: a conceptual framework
        (3) Endangered species and a threatened discipline: 
            behavioural ecology
        (4) Eighteen reasons animal behaviourists avoid
            involvement in conservation
     Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio:pdf_icon   
     Discussion – 
     – Dicussion Leader(s):Alicia Bird, Eridia Pacheco

14. Thursday Nov 5 – Social Behavior – Margaret Crofoot

   Readings
        (1) An evolutionary frame work for studying
            mechanisms of social behavior
        (2) Constraints and flexibility in mammalian
            social behavior: introduction and synthesis
        (3) Expanded social fitness and Hamilton's rule
            for kin, kith, and kind
        (4) Evo-devo and the evolution of social behavior
        (5) The social lives of microbes

   Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio: power_point_icon   

   Discussion – 
   – Discussion Leader(s): Ericaa Orcutt, Alicia Bird

15. Monday – Nov 9  –  Quantitative genetics, Andy Sih (7:00 – 8:50 PM)

     Readings
        (1) Multivariate inheritance and evolution: a review of concepts
        (2) The genetics of fish behavior
        (3) The genetics of politics: discovery, challenges, and progress
     Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio: power_point_icon 

16. Tuesday– Nov 10 – Quantitative genetics, Andy Sih

     Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio:power_point_icon 
     Discussion – 
     – Dicussion Leader(s): Group Discussion

16. Thursday Nov 12 – Animal Circadian Clock,  Joanna Chiu

     Readings
        (1) Circadian timekeeping and output mechanisms
            in animals

     Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio: power_point_icon  

     DiscussionDicussion Leader(s): Cameron Jones

17. Tuesday  Nov 17 – Animal Welfare — YeunShin Lee (5:00 PM –  6:20 PM)

     Readings
        (1) Evolution and animal welfare
        (2) Using behavior to assess animal welfare
        (3) A user's guide to animal welfare science
        (4) Conflicting and complementary ethics of
            animal welfare considerations in reintroductions
     Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio:pdf_icon

18. Thursday  Nov 19 – Animal Welfare — YeunShin Lee (5:00 PM –  6:20 PM)

     Readings
     Discussion –  
     – Dicussion Leader(s): Amilia Munson, Alex Kowalczyk, Eridia Pacheco

19. Tuesday Nov 24 – Genomic Approaches to Social Behavior, Brian Johnson

     Readings
        (1) Large-Scale Coding Sequence Change Underlies ...
     Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio: power_point_icon 
      Discussion –
     – Dicussion Leader(s):Group Discussion
20. Tuesday Dec 1 – The Evolution of Play Behavior – Jeff Schank
    Readings
        (1) Current perspectives on the biological study
            of play: signs of progress
        (2) Mammalian play: training for the unexpected
        (3) The evolution of social play by learning to 
            cooperate
    Slides/Lecture Notes/Audio:power_point_icon      
       Discussion –  – Dicussion Leader(s):Cameron Jones, Amelia Munson 21. 

21. Thursday Dec 3 – Nothing scheduled

 

FINAL EXAM – Tuesday Dec.  8, 9:00 AM (24 hour take home)