Comparative Development of Adaptive Skills

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Abu Gideiri
Andrew Lock
Anne Bekoff
Anogenital Sniffing
Anterior Myotomes
Augmentation Hypothesis
Axial Muscles
behavioural ontogeny
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Celia L. Moore
cells
Ceryle Rudis
Cistothorus Palustris
Cistothorus Platensis
comparative behavioural evolution research
copulatory
Copulatory Behavior
David Chiszar
Dogfish Sharks
ecological influences on behaviour
EMG Recording
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Inclusive Fitness
Indirect Fitness
Indirect Selection
innate
Innate Releasing Mechanism
Interlimb Coordination
jays
Jeffrey R. Alberts
Jerram L. Brown
Juvenile Signals
laboratory field integration
Male Sexual Behavior
mammalian sexual differentiation
Maternal Call
mauthner
Mauthner Cells
mechanism
mexican
Mexican Jays
movements
releasing
social recognition mechanisms
Swamp Sparrows
Teleost Fish
trunk
Trunk Movements
vertebrate development
W. John Smith
Zonotrichia Leucophrys

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138578159
  • Weight: 700g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1985, the aim of this book was to examine the development of adaptive skills in a comparative context. Comparative explorations have evolutionary implications. Thus it is inevitable that the contributors to this volume, all of whom come to the study of development with a comparative perspective, manifest concern with the relationships between ontogeny and phylogeny. In this volume both field and laboratory approaches are presented. It is quite clear that the laboratory studies are increasingly informed by ecological considerations that derive from field excursions. It is also the case that laboratory findings are becoming an essential source in directing field inquiries. The problems explored are theoretically rich and methodically significant and the comparative scope of the contributions range widely among vertebrate species.

Eugene S. Gollin