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2 - Behavior, mating systems and sexual selection

from Part II - Behavioral ecology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Peter W. Price
Affiliation:
Northern Arizona University
Robert F. Denno
Affiliation:
University of Maryland, College Park
Micky D. Eubanks
Affiliation:
Texas A & M University
Deborah L. Finke
Affiliation:
University of Missouri, Columbia
Ian Kaplan
Affiliation:
Purdue University, Indiana
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Summary

Behavior can be defined as anything that an individual does during its life, involving action in response to a stimulus. Eating behavior is stimulated by hunger; sleeping or resting behavior is in response to fatigue; escape is a response to attack and reproductive behavior is in response to physiological urges and stimulation by members of the opposite sex. Throughout the life of an individual insect it is behaving constantly in one way or another, making behavior a large and important subject.

Many behaviors are in response to external stimuli, part of the environment, making them ecologically relevant, and behavioral ecology is an important part of ecological understanding. Understanding much of behavior results from the study of how species are adapted to the problems of survival and reproduction, and how natural selection shapes the trajectory of a lineage through the costs and benefits, the opportunities and constraints, of any particular genetic and phenotypic change in that lineage.

Type
Chapter
Information
Insect Ecology
Behavior, Populations and Communities
, pp. 27 - 71
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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References

Alcock, J 2005 Animal Behavior: An Evolutionary approach Sunderland, MA Sinauer
Dingle, H 1996 Migration: The Biology of Life on the Move Oxford Oxford University Press
Drosopoulos, S. Claridge, M. F. 2006 Insect Sounds and Communication: Physiology, Behavior, Ecology and Evolution Boca Raton, FL Taylor and Francis
Shuster, S. M. Wade, M. J. 2003 Mating Systems and Strategies Princeton, NJ Princeton University Press
Thornhill, R. Alcock, J. 1983 The Evolution of Insect Mating Systems Cambridge, MA Harvard University Press

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