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Zoo behaviour science in the Research Centre for Vertebrate Studies of the Academy of Sciences of the German Democratic Republic (in the Animal Park of Berlin)
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA;2. Program in Neuroscience, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA
Abstract:This is a report of the results of behaviour science studies in the Animal Park of Berlin and the Academy of Sciences in the German Democratic Republic (G.D.R.). The major goal of this research is to investigate the behaviour of rare animals as a basis for zoological research, systematics and comparative studies in evolution. In addition, further research provided information directly applicable to behavioural management in zoos, farms and wild animal collections. Three main comparative studies dealt with urination and defecation in mammals, allelomimetic behaviour in vertebrates, and audio-visual orientation responses in several species of birds and mammals. Ethograms were created for the Red Woolly Opossum, Maned Wolf, Takin and Giant Eland Antelope. Social and reproductive behaviour studies were conducted on the Wolf, Golden Lion Marmoset, Père David's Deer, Mouflon and Wild Boar. Reports are included on the circadian activity of Pigmy Armadillo and Wild Boar. New information was revealed regarding communication in Mouflon and Père David's Deer, in addition to the new finding that some social behaviour patterns in Wild Boar are dependent on circadian rhythms. Three wolf packs studied consecutively in the same enclosure revealed that each pack differed in its social behaviour and that the dominant female (alpha female) determined the social structure. The problem of animal-human interactions is discussed. Zoos are seen as a medial stage between wilderness and farm management. It is suggested that an important task of zoo behaviour science is to study the ability of wild animals to adapt to purposes such as animal farms, animal husbandry institutes and domestic animal productivity, and to study the behaviour of the original forms of domestic animals in order to better understand and manage them.
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