Animal behaviour : a very short introduction / Tristram D. Wyatt.
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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Female Library | QL751 .W93 2017 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000338987 | |
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Main Library | QL751 .W93 2017 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000338994 |
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QL737.P96 .S733 2014 Planet without apes/ | QL737.U63 .P5313 2017 The rhinoceros and the megatherium : an essay in natural history / | QL739.2 .W58 2016 Ecological and environmental physiology of mammals / | QL751 .W93 2017 Animal behaviour : a very short introduction / | QL785 .W127 2016 Are we smart enough to know how smart animals are? / | QL85 .C666 2016 Conflict, negotiation, and coexistence : rethinking human-elephant relations in South Asia / | QM151 .D45513 2010 Delavier's stretching anatomy / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 123-140) and index.
1. How animals behave (and why) -- 2. Sensing and responding -- 3. How behaviour develops -- 4. Learning and animal culture -- 5. Signals for survival -- 6. Winning strategies -- 7. The wisdom of crowds -- 8. Applying behaviour.
How animals behave is crucial to their survival and reproduction. The application of new molecular tools such as DNA fingerprinting and genomics is causing a revolution in the study of animal behaviour, while developments in computing and image analysis allow us to investigate behaviour in ways never previously possible. By combining these with the traditional methods of observation and experiments, we are now learning more about animal behaviour than ever before. In this Very Short Introduction Tristram D. Wyatt discusses how animal behaviour has evolved, how behaviours develop in each individual (considering the interplay of genes, epigenetics, and experience), how we can understand animal societies, and how we can explain collective behaviour such as swirling flocks of starlings. Using lab and field studies from across the whole animal kingdom, he looks at mammals, butterflies, honeybees, fish, and birds, analysing what drives behaviour, and exploring instinct, learning, and culture. Looking more widely at behavioural ecology, he also considers some aspects of human behaviour.-- publisher.
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