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Author (up) Mace, G.M.; Harvey, P.H.; Clutton-Brock, T.H.
Title Brain size and ecology in small mammals Type Journal Article
Year 1981 Publication Journal of Zoology Abbreviated Journal J Zool
Volume 193 Issue 3 Pages 333-354
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Abstract Relative brain size (measured as gross brain size after body size effects are removed) differs systematically between families of rodents, insectivores and lagomorphs. The Sciuridae have the largest relative brain size, the Soricidae and Bathyergidae the smallest. These results are discussed and compared with previous analyses of relative brain sizes among primates and bats. These differences complicate comparisons between relative brain size across phylogenetically diverse species and attempts to relate differences in relative brain size to ecological variables. To overcome these problems, best fit relationships were estimated for each family, and values for each genus were expressed as deviations from the lines of best fit. We refer to these values as Comparative Brain Size (CBS). Differences in CBS are related to differences in habitat type (forest-dwelling genera have larger CBS' than grassland forms), in diet (folivores have smaller CBS' than generalists or insectivores, frugivores and granivores), in zonation (arboreal genera have larger CBS' than terrestrial ones) and in activity timing (nocturnal genera have larger CBS' than dirurnal ones). However, these ecological categories are interrelated and, when the effects of other ecological differences are taken into account using analyses of variance, only the differences associated with diet, and possibly habitat remain.
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Publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd Place of Publication Editor
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ISSN 1469-7998 ISBN Medium
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 5455
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Author (up) McCall, C.A.; Potter, G.D.; Friend, T.H.; Ingram, R.S.
Title Learning abilities in yearling horses using the Hebb-Williams closed field maze Type Journal Article
Year 1981 Publication J. Anim. Sci. Abbreviated Journal J. Anim. Sci.
Volume 53 Issue 4 Pages 928-933
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Notes Cited By (since 1996): 9; Export Date: 24 October 2008 Approved no
Call Number Admin @ knut @ Serial 4613
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Author (up) Miller, R.
Title Male aggression, dominance and breeding behaviour in Red Desert feral horses Type Journal Article
Year 1981 Publication Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie Abbreviated Journal Z. Tierpsychol.
Volume 57 Issue Pages 340-201
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 2374
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Author (up) Parker, G.A.; Rubenstein, D.I.
Title Role assessment, reserve strategy, and acquisition of information in asymmetric animal conflicts Type Journal Article
Year 1981 Publication Animal Behaviour. Abbreviated Journal Anim. Behav.
Volume 29 Issue 1 Pages 221-240
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Abstract It was formerly argued that alternative evolutionarily stable strategies (ESSs) are possible for animal contests characterized by some asymmetry that can be perceived with perfect accuracy. Where roles A and B refer to the asymmetry between opponents, ESSs are: [`]fight when A, retreat when B', and vice versa. Either can be an ESS, but only if the [`]reserve strategy' (=what an animal does when it fights) is sufficiently damaging. We examine the [`]war of attrition' (winner = opponent that persists longer). In a population at either ESS, reserve strategy is never normally shown; it is therefore subject to drift unless the selective action of rare individuals which break the convention is considered. These could arise either by mutation or by mistakes in role assessment. When mutations and mistakes simply specify that occasionally an animal fights when it [`]should' retreat, selection adjusts reserve strategy to a level where only one ESS (the [`]commonsense' ESS) is possible, if the asymmetry is relevant to payoff. Thus for asymmetries in fighting ability or resource value, the individual with the lower score will retreat. However, we are particularly concerned with cases where both payoff-relevant aspects (fighting ability and resource value) are asymmetric. If opponents sustain contest costs at rates KA and KB, and their resource values are VA and VB, an [`]optimal assessor' strategy defined by the interaction between the two asymmetries, is a unique ESS. It obeys the rule [`]fight on estimating role A, where VA/KA>VB/KB; retreat in B'. If mistakes can occur in both roles, but are very rate, the ESS is not fundamentally altered though there will be infinitesimal tendencies for persisting in role B. Selection to improve assessment abilities intensifies as abilities improve, but is weak if roles A and B are rather similar. Over a range of similarity between roles, an [`]owner wins' convention may be adopted if ownership correlates positively with role A and an individual cannot tell when it would otherwise pay him to break the convention. We also examine a contest in which information about roles can be acquired only during a contest itself, and at a cost. Much depends on the rate at which information is acquired relative to the rate at which costs are expended, and on whether contests normally escalate in intensity, remain at the same level, or de-escalate. Selection favours short contests when costs are high relative to resource value, where the outcome of a round contains much information about fighting ability, and where the actual disparity in fighting ability is large.
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ISSN 0003-3472 ISBN Medium
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 5325
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Author (up) Partridge, B.L.
Title Internal dynamics and the interrelations of fish in schools Type Journal Article
Year 1981 Publication Journal of Comparative Physiology A: Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology Abbreviated Journal J Comp Physiol Sensory Neural Behav Physiol
Volume 144 Issue 3 Pages 313-325
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Abstract The three-dimensional structure of schools of saithe (Pollachius virens) and the interactions between individuals over time were analyzed in 12,240 frames of videotape sampled at 2.7 Hz. Time series analyses of the interactions between identified individuals allowed testing of assumptions of anonymity vs. leadership in schools and investigation of the transfer of information between individuals by which collective decisions are made. Results include the following:1.Saithe match changes in both swimming direction and speed of their neighbors but correlations are greater for swimming speed. Average speed of the school does not greatly affect correlations between neighboring fish although the reaction latencies may be somewhat increased. As shown previously (Partridge et al. 1980) nearest neighbor distance (NND) decreases with increasing school velocity.2.Saithe simultaneously match the headings and swimming speeds of at least their first two nearest neighbors within the school (NN1 and NN2). Partialling out the correlation between a fish's neighbors demonstrates that a fish's correlation to his second nearest neighbor (NN2) is not simply a transitive function of mutual correlation between the NN1 and NN2.3.Several sources of individual variation in schooling performance were examined. In all respects except one, that of preferred positions within the school, saithe showed no individual differences, i.e., some were not “better schoolers” than others. Although fish in the school differed in length by up to a factor of 2.5, no size related effects in NND or nearest neighbor positioning were found.4.Single Linkage Cluster Analysis (SLCA) of the cross-correlations of fishs' swimming speeds and directions demonstrated quantitatively the existence of subgroups within schools if they contain more than 10-11 members. Subgroups acting more-or-less independently in terms of short term variations in speed and direction nonetheless remained within the school as a whole and were not often apparent to observers since members of one group interdigitated with those of another. How individuals know to which subgroup they belong remains unanswered.
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Serial 2063
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Author (up) Prescott J,
Title Suckling behavior of Llama and Chapman's Zebra in captivity Type Journal Article
Year 1981 Publication Abbreviated Journal Appl Anim Ethol
Volume 7 Issue Pages 293-299
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Notes from Professor Hans Klingels Equine Reference List Approved no
Call Number Serial 1483
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Author (up) R. A. J. Taylor
Title The Behavioural Basis of Redistribution I. The Delta -Model Concept Type Journal Article
Year 1981 Publication The Journal of Animal Ecology Abbreviated Journal T. J. Anim. Ecol.
Volume 50 Issue 2 Pages 573-586
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Abstract (1) A conceptual model is developed in which spatial behaviour is density-dependent. The behaviour is classified as congregatory or migratory according to whether it results in movement towards or away from population concentrations. (2) Spatial behaviour is shown to result from both individual and population interactions. (3) The stability properties of the model are explored and it is shown how, under particular conditions, populations obeying the model have a population density regulating mechanism. (4) The similarity between the model and the potential energy curve of physics is noted, but it is emphasized that this is a behavioural not a physical model.
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Notes Approved no
Call Number refbase @ user @ Serial 720
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Author (up) Rau Re,
Title Zur Geschichte und Präparation der Mainzer Quaggas Type Journal Article
Year 1981 Publication Abbreviated Journal Mainzer Naturw Archiv
Volume 19 Issue Pages 221-236
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Notes from Professor Hans Klingels Equine Reference List Approved no
Call Number Serial 1498
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Author (up) Ridge, J.A.; Baldwin, R.L.; Labhardt, A.M.
Title Nature of the fast and slow refolding reactions of iron(III) cytochrome c Type Journal Article
Year 1981 Publication Biochemistry Abbreviated Journal Biochemistry
Volume 20 Issue 6 Pages 1622-1630
Keywords Animals; Ascorbic Acid; *Cytochrome c Group; Guanidines; Horses; Kinetics; Oxidation-Reduction; Protein Conformation; Spectrum Analysis
Abstract The fast and slow refolding reactions of iron(III) cytochrome c (Fe(III) cyt c), previously studied by Ikai et al. (Ikai, A., Fish, W. W., & Tanford, C. (1973) J. Mol. Biol. 73, 165--184), have been reinvestigated. The fast reaction has the major amplitude (78%) and is 100-fold faster than the slow reaction in these conditions (pH 7.2, 25 degrees C, 1.75 M guanidine hydrochloride). We show here that native cyt c is the product formed in the fast reaction as well as in the slow reaction. Two probes have been used to test for formation of native cyt c. absorbance in the 695-nm band and rate of reduction of by L-ascorbate. Different unfolded species (UF, US) give rise to the fast and slow refolding reactions, as shown both by refolding assays at different times after unfolding (“double-jump” experiments) and by the formation of native cyt c in each of the fast and slow refolding reactions. Thus the fast refolding reaction is UF leads to N and the slow refolding reaction is Us leads to N, where N is native cyt c, and there is a US in equilibrium UF equilibrium in unfolded cyt c. The results are consistent with the UF in equilibrium US reaction being proline isomerization, but this has not yet been tested in detail. Folding intermediates have been detected in both reactions. In the UF leads to N reaction, the Soret absorbance change precedes the recovery of the native 695-nm band spectrum, showing that Soret absorbance monitors the formation of a folding intermediate. In the US leads to N reaction an ascorbate-reducible intermediate has been found at an early stage in folding and the Soret absorbance change occurs together with the change at 695 nm as N is formed in the final stage of folding.
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Language English Summary Language Original Title
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ISSN 0006-2960 ISBN Medium
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Notes PMID:6261802 Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 3809
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Author (up) Roberts, J.; Hunter, M.L.; Kacelnik, A.
Title The ground effect and acoustic communication Type Journal Article
Year 1981 Publication Animal Behaviour. Abbreviated Journal Anim. Behav.
Volume 29 Issue 2 Pages 633-634
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Serial 2123
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