Organisms Respond to Environmental Cues (College Board AP Biology)

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Responses to External Cues

  • In order to increase reproductive fitness, individuals can act on information and communicate it to others
    • Both intraspecifically and interspecifically
  • Communication occurs through various mechanisms
    • Organisms have a variety of signaling behaviors that cause changes in the behavior of other organisms and can result in different degrees of reproductive success
    • Animals use visual, audible, tactile, electrical and chemical signals to indicate a variety of signals
      • Dominance
      • How/where to find food
      • To establish territory
      • To warn of predators
    • All of these mechanisms are designed to ensure reproductive success
    • These signals act as stimuli to other organisms, whose responses govern the signaling animal's reproductive success
  • Responses to information and communication of information are vital to natural selection and evolution
    • Natural selection favors innate and learned behaviors that increase survival and reproductive fitness
    • Cooperative behavior tends to increase the fitness of the individual and the survival of the population
      • Rather like members of a sports team working cooperatively towards a winning performance
    • Individuals can act on information and communicate it to others
  • There are many examples of this kind of behavior in Nature, some of which are set out below
    • These are set out for illustration purposes, the details of these systems are beyond the scope of the AP Exam

Examples of Responses to Environmental Cues

  • Photoperiodism and phototropism in plants
    • Plants respond to the direction of the light that reaches them and grow accordingly
    • Photoperiodism is the plant's response to day length that affects fruiting and leaf shedding according to the seasons
  • Taxis and kinesis in animals
    • Taxis is the movement towards or away from a stimulus eg. food
    • Kinesis is a random movement that leads to an animal finding food, more so than it would have found by staying stationary
  • Nocturnal and diurnal activity
    • Nocturnal (nighttime wakefulness) animals might prefer the night because it is cooler for hunting, or there is greater availability of prey / fewer predators
    • Diurnal (daytime wakefulness) animals make use of light and hotter temperatures for hunting, foraging and for warming their cells (ectotherms)
  • Fight-or-flight response
    • This is the hormonal response to an existential threat (eg. a predator emerging), brought about by adrenaline (epinephrine)
  • Predator warnings
    • Some animals warn their relatives if a predator is at large
    • Meerkats post sentries at the entrances to their burrows to bark loudly to warn other meerkats (who are feeding outside the burrow) of the presence of a predator
  • Plant responses to herbivory
    • Some plants contain spikes, trichomes, thorns and foul tasting chemicals to deter herbivores
    • When a plant is being eaten by a herbivore, it can secrete poisonous chemicals in self defense
  • Territorial marking in mammals
    • Scent marking eg. by male cats deters intraspecific competition from other males who may wish to exploit that territory for a mate or for food
  • Coloration in flowers
    • This attracts insects for pollination
  • Bird songs
    • This allows birds to attract a mate
  • Pack behavior in animals
    • This allows a group of animals to achieve a task collectively that one individual could not eg. a pack of wild dogs hunting a much larger prey animal such as a wildebeest
    • The dogs chase, harry, would and kill the prey individually in turn, working as a team, then share the feed at the end
  • Parent and offspring interactions
    • This allows behaviors to be learned, such as the young grizzly bear learning fishing skills from its mother
  • Courtship and mating behaviors
    • This enables individuals to identify a potential mate of the same species
    • And to identify advantageous alleles in the mate that can be passed on
  • Herd, flock, and schooling behavior in animals
    • This allows 'safety in numbers' eg. sardines school into a large group, which reduces the probability of any one individual being predated on eg. by bluefin tuna
  • Colony and swarming behavior in insects
    • This increases the chance of finding an alternative habitat eg. bees swarming from a nest that has reached its capacity to carry bees
  • Kin selection
    • An individual animal sacrifices itself to the benefit of the genetic fitness of its relatives
    • An example might be an old, injured moose giving itself up in a hunt by wolves, to allow its younger, stronger relatives to get away

Exam Tip

Whilst these examples are many and varied, an important point to make in your exam answer is that the common feature in all these aspects of behavior is that they all increase the organism's reproductive fitness. Each example gives its owner a greater chance of being able to make it to reproductive age, to find a suitable mate and to pass on its alleles to the next generation. 

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Phil

Author: Phil

Phil has a BSc in Biochemistry from the University of Birmingham, followed by an MBA from Manchester Business School. He has 15 years of teaching and tutoring experience, teaching Biology in schools before becoming director of a growing tuition agency. He has also examined Biology for one of the leading UK exam boards. Phil has a particular passion for empowering students to overcome their fear of numbers in a scientific context.