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An Evolutionary Approach To Animal Behavior | p. 1 |
Questions about Behavior | p. 2 |
How Questions about Proximate Causes | p. 3 |
Why Questions about Ultimate Causes | p. 3 |
Answering Proximate and Ultimate Questions about Behavior | p. 5 |
Beewolves and Homing Behavior | p. 5 |
Gulls and Eggshell Removal | p. 9 |
Darwinian Theory and Ultimate Hypotheses | p. 11 |
Darwinian Logic and the Study of Behavior | p. 13 |
The Problem with Group Selection | p. 14 |
Testing Alternative Hypotheses | p. 16 |
Certainty and Science | p. 18 |
Proximate and Ultimate Causes of Behavior: How and Why Birds Sing | p. 22 |
Different Songs: Proximate Causes | p. 24 |
Social Experience and Song Development | p. 26 |
The Avian Song Control System | p. 28 |
The Development of the Song Control System | p. 31 |
Song Differences Between the Sexes | p. 32 |
Avoiding a Misunderstanding | p. 34 |
Different Songs: Ultimate Causes | p. 34 |
The Adaptationist Approach | p. 35 |
Why Do Only Males Sing? | p. 39 |
Natural Selection and Dialects | p. 42 |
Proximate and Ultimate Causes Are Complementary | p. 45 |
The Development of Behavior: A Focus on Heredity | p. 50 |
The Genetics of Behavior | p. 52 |
Genetic Differences and Human Behavior | p. 55 |
Genetic Differences and IQ Differences | p. 57 |
How Many Genetic Differences Are Needed to Produce a Behavioral Difference? | p. 59 |
The Evolution of Behavior | p. 65 |
Different Selection Pressures, Different Genes, Different Behaviors | p. 67 |
The Development of Behavior: A Focus on the Environment | p. 76 |
The Interactive Theory of Development: Hormones and Behavior | p. 78 |
When to Become a Forager in a Honey Bee Colony | p. 80 |
When to Become a Territorial Male | p. 82 |
Experience and Behavioral Development | p. 84 |
Early Experience and Recognition of Relatives | p. 85 |
Learning as Behavioral Development | p. 90 |
Evolution and Behavioral Development | p. 92 |
The Adaptive Value of Developmental Flexibility | p. 94 |
Sex Differences in Spatial Learning Ability | p. 98 |
The Evolution of Associative Learning | p. 99 |
The Evolution of Developmental Homeostasis | p. 103 |
The Adaptive Value of Developmental Homeostasis | p. 106 |
The Control of Behavior: Neural Mechanisms | p. 114 |
How Neurons Control Behavior | p. 116 |
Sensory Receptors and Survival | p. 119 |
Relaying and Responding to Sensory Input | p. 126 |
Central Pattern Generators | p. 128 |
The Song of the Midshipman Fish | p. 131 |
The Proximate Basis of Stimulus Filtering | p. 132 |
Stimulus Filtering by Auditory Receptors | p. 132 |
Stimulus Filtering in the Tactile Mode | p. 134 |
Adaptive Proximate Mechanisms of Behavior | p. 137 |
Adaptive Mechanisms of Navigation | p. 142 |
An Olfactory Map | p. 145 |
The Organization of Behavior: Neurons and Hormones | p. 154 |
How Neural Command Centers Organize Behavior | p. 156 |
Clock Mechanisms and Behavioral Schedules | p. 159 |
How Do Circadian Mechanisms Work? | p. 161 |
Long-Term Cycles of Behavior | p. 165 |
The Physical Environment Influences Long-Term Cycles | p. 167 |
Changing Priorities in Changing Social Environments | p. 170 |
The Effects of Copulation in the Green Anole | p. 171 |
Hormones Help Organize Social Behavior | p. 173 |
Adaptation and Antipredator Behavior | p. 182 |
The Meaning of Adaptation | p. 184 |
The Comparative Method for Testing Adaptationist Hypotheses | p. 187 |
The Importance of Divergent Evolution | p. 189 |
The Importance of Convergent Evolution | p. 190 |
The Diversity of Antipredator Adaptations | p. 192 |
The Value of Body "Decorations" | p. 194 |
The Value of Warning Behavior | p. 197 |
How To Stop a Pursuer | p. 200 |
The Value of Vigilance | p. 202 |
The Dilution Effect and the Selfish Herd | p. 204 |
Fighting Back | p. 207 |
A Tactic of Last Resort? | p. 209 |
The Evolution of Feeding Behavior | p. 214 |
Locating Food | p. 216 |
The Origins of Prey-Locating Mechanisms | p. 217 |
Getting Help from Companions | p. 219 |
The History of Honey Bee Dances | p. 222 |
The Adaptive Value of Honey Bee Dances | p. 225 |
The Information Center Hypothesis | p. 227 |
Locating Prey by Deceit | p. 229 |
Selecting What to Eat | p. 231 |
How to Choose an Optimal Clam | p. 233 |
How to Choose an Optimal Mussel | p. 234 |
Criticisms of Optimality Theory | p. 236 |
The Evolution of Alternative Diets | p. 236 |
Consuming What You Select to Eat | p. 238 |
How to Open a Whelk | p. 240 |
Why Do Humans Consume Alcohol, Spices, and Dirt? | p. 242 |
Choosing Where to Live | p. 248 |
Habitat Selection | p. 250 |
Habitat Preferences in a Territorial Species | p. 253 |
Dispersing from One Place to Another | p. 255 |
Migration | p. 259 |
The Costs of Migration | p. 260 |
The Benefits of Migration | p. 262 |
Migration as a Conditional Tactic | p. 264 |
Territoriality | p. 266 |
Territoriality and Calories | p. 269 |
Territorial Puzzles | p. 271 |
Why Do Territory Holders Almost Always Win? | p. 272 |
The Evolution of Communication | p. 280 |
The Origins and Adaptive Value of a Signal | p. 282 |
Cumulative Selection and Multiple Changes | p. 283 |
The Adaptive Value of Past Changes | p. 284 |
Current Adaptive Value | p. 286 |
The History of a Signal-Receiving Mechanism | p. 287 |
The History of Insect Wings | p. 289 |
Sensory Exploitation of Signal Receivers by Signalers | p. 292 |
Sensory Preferences May Precede the Evolution of a Signal | p. 293 |
The Panda Principle | p. 297 |
The Adaptationist Approach to Communication Systems | p. 299 |
Why Do Baby Birds Beg So Noisily for Food? | p. 300 |
Illegitimate Receivers | p. 305 |
Adaptive Signal Receiving | p. 307 |
Receivers May Require Honest Signals | p. 308 |
Why Does Deception Occur? | p. 311 |
The Evolution of Reproductive Behavior | p. 316 |
The Evolution of Differences in Sex Roles | p. 318 |
Testing the Evolutionary Theory of Sex Differences | p. 323 |
Sexual Selection and Competition for Mates | p. 327 |
Social Dominance and Male Fitness | p. 331 |
Alternative Mating Tactics | p. 332 |
A Conditional Strategy with Alternative Mating Tactics | p. 334 |
Three Distinct Strategies: Three Mating Tactics | p. 335 |
Sexual Selection and Sperm Competition | p. 337 |
Mate Guarding | p. 338 |
Sexual Selection and Mate Choice | p. 341 |
Female Mate Choice without Material Benefits | p. 346 |
Testing the Healthy Mate, Good Genes, and Runaway Selection Theories | p. 351 |
Sexual Conflict between Males and Females | p. 353 |
The Evolution of Mating Systems | p. 360 |
Is Monogamy Adaptive? | p. 362 |
Monogamy in Mammals | p. 364 |
Monogamy in Birds | p. 366 |
Extra-Pair Copulations: The Male Perspective | p. 369 |
Extra-Pair Copulations: The Female Perspective | p. 370 |
Polyandry without Polygyny | p. 375 |
Polygyny | p. 377 |
Female Defense Polygyny: The Female Perspective | p. 379 |
Resource Defense Polygyny | p. 380 |
Resource Defense Polygyny: The Female Perspective | p. 381 |
Scramble Competition Polygyny | p. 382 |
Lek Polygyny | p. 385 |
Why Do Males Aggregate in Leks? | p. 386 |
Why Do Many Females Mate with the Same Males at Leks? | p. 389 |
The Evolution of Parental Care | p. 394 |
Why Is Parental Care More Often Maternal than Paternal? | p. 396 |
Exceptions to the Rule | p. 397 |
Why Do Male Water Bugs Do All the Work? | p. 400 |
Discriminating Parental Care | p. 402 |
Offspring Recognition: Comparative Studies | p. 403 |
Why Adopt Genetic Strangers? | p. 404 |
The History of Interspecific Brood Parasitism | p. 406 |
Why Accept a Parasite's Egg? | p. 408 |
Can Adoption Benefit Foster Parents? | p. 410 |
The Evolution of Parental Favoritism | p. 411 |
The Evolution of Social Behavior | p. 420 |
The Benefits and Costs of Social Life | p. 422 |
The Evolution of Helpful Behavior | p. 427 |
Reciprocal Altruism or Personal Gain? | p. 429 |
Altruism and Indirect Selection | p. 433 |
The Alarm Call of Belding's Ground Squirrel | p. 434 |
The Concept of Inclusive Fitness | p. 435 |
Inclusive Fitness and Helpers at the Nest | p. 437 |
Insect Helpers at the Nest | p. 442 |
The Evolution of Eusocial Behavior | p. 445 |
Testing the Haplodiploid Hypothesis | p. 447 |
Very Close Relatedness Is Not Essential for Eusociality to Evolve | p. 449 |
The Ecology of Eusociality | p. 451 |
The Evolution of Human Behavior | p. 456 |
The Adaptationist Approach to Human Behavior | p. 458 |
The Sociobiology Controversy | p. 459 |
Evolution and the Diversity of Human Cultures | p. 462 |
Sociobiology versus Arbitrary Culture Theory | p. 464 |
Adaptive Mating Decisions | p. 466 |
Adaptive Mate Choice by Women | p. 466 |
Adaptive Mate Choice by Men | p. 471 |
Conflict between the Sexes | p. 474 |
Coercive Sex | p. 477 |
Adaptive Parental Care | p. 480 |
Helping Children Marry | p. 482 |
Glossary | p. 489 |
Bibliography | p. 495 |
Illustration Credits | p. 529 |
Index | p. 531 |
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved. |
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