Laboratory Research on Behavioral Interactions as Generators of Population Phenomena in Rodents |
| |
Authors: | DEWSBURY DONALD A. |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Florida Gainesville, Florida 32611 |
| |
Abstract: | Many population phenomena are driven by the behavior of individualanimals. The effects of behavior on differential reproductionvary with the mating system and with ecological factors; understandingof the complex interactions requires both laboratory and fieldresearch. Ecologically-relevant laboratory research should bedesigned using generalizable behavioral patterns with animalsof appropriate species, meaningful genotypes, and known earlyexperience that are studied in carefully-designed situations.Three exemplars of research of potential relevance to populationphenomena are discussed. Studies of dominance and differentialreproduction in deer mice in seminatural enclosures suggestthat dominant males make disproportionately large contributionsto gene pools and that dominance may be heritable. Laboratorystudies of reproductive function in individuals bearing differentalleles, determined electrophoretically, appear relevant topopulation processes reported correlated with changes in genefrequencies at these loci. Patterns of mate choice in two speciesof Microtus may be important in generating their contrastingmating systems in the field. Well-designed laboratory researchcan help reveal behavioral processes critical to populationphenomena. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 Oxford 等数据库收录! |
|