ChapTitleBig9 Evolution and BehaviorChapTitleSmallCOMMUNICATION, COOPERATION, AND CONFLICT IN THE ANIMAL WORLD

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Behaviors are traits that can evolve.

  • 9.1 Behavior has adaptive value, just like other traits.
  • 9.2 Some behaviors are innate.
  • 9.3 Some behaviors must be learned (and some are learned more easily than others).
  • 9.4 Complex-appearing behaviors don’t require complex thought in order to evolve.

Cooperation, selfishness, and altruism can be better understood with an evolutionary approach.

  • 9.5 “Kindness” can be explained.
  • 9.6 Apparent altruism toward relatives can evolve through kin selection.
  • 9.7 Apparent altruism toward unrelated individuals can evolve through reciprocal altruism.
  • 9.8 In an “alien” environment, behaviors produced by natural selection may no longer be adaptive.
  • 9.9 Selfish genes win out over group selection.

Sexual conflict can result from disparities in reproductive investment by males and females.

  • 9.10 There are big differences in how much males and females must invest in reproduction.
  • 9.11 Males and females are vulnerable at different stages of the reproductive exchange.
  • 9.12 Tactics for getting a mate: competition and courtship can help males and females secure reproductive success.
  • 9.13 Tactics for keeping a mate: mate guarding can protect a male’s reproductive investment.
  • 9.14 This is how we do it: When paternity uncertainty seems greater, is paternal care reduced?
  • 9.15 Monogamy versus polygamy: mating behaviors can vary across human and animal cultures.
  • 9.16 Sexual dimorphism is an indicator of a population’s mating behavior.

Communication and the design of signals evolve.

  • 9.17 Animal communication and language abilities evolve.
  • 9.18 Honest signals reduce deception.

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