Behaviour

Topic: 
Interdisciplinary investigations of the evolution and function of bird bills
Speaker: 
Anand Krishnan, IISER Bhopal
Date & Time: 
29 Jun 2022 - 3:00pm
Event Type: 
Invited Seminar
Venue: 
CES Seminar Hall, 3rd Floor, Biological Sciences Building
Abstract:

The evolution of morphological traits is often strongly influenced by functional and biomechanical demands. Perhaps the best example of this is the avian bill, a multifunctional appendage consisting of an inner bony core and an outer keratinous rhamphotheca, which presents a unique opportunity to study form-function relationships. Among the varied functions of the bill, certain groups of birds use their bills to excavate tree hollows for nesting, roosting, and feeding. The physical stresses experienced during this mechanically demanding task may be linked to bill shape and material properties, and also to broader factors like environmental conditions which influence the availability and mechanical properties of the substrate. Here, we examine these relationships in the frugivorous Asian and African barbets, which occupy diverse climatic regimes and excavate nest hollows in trees. Using micro-CT scans of museum specimens coupled with landmark-based geometric morphometrics, we find that bill shape diversity has accumulated gradually over time in both clades under allometric constraints, and exhibits a significant relationship with climatic variables. Secondly, using finite element analysis and beam theoretic approaches, we find that maxillary geometry trades off with excavation performance under different loading regimes. Our study thus aims for an integrative, interdisciplinary understanding of the evolution of morphological traits in birds.

Topic: 
Collective motion and mechanisms of swimming coordination in fish schools
Speaker: 
Dr. Guy Theraulaz, Centre de Recherches sur la Cognition Animale, Centre de Biologie Intégrative, CNRS, UMR 5169, Université Paul Sabatier, France
Date & Time: 
19 Oct 2022 - 3:00pm
Event Type: 
Invited Seminar
Venue: 
CES Seminar Hall, 3rd Floor, Biological Sciences Building
Coffee/Tea: 
Before the talk
Abstract:

Schools of fish and flocks of birds display an impressive variety of collective movement patterns that emerge from local interactions among group members. These collective phenomena raise a variety of questions about the interactions rules that govern the coordination of individuals’ motions and the emergence of large-scale patterns. While numerous models have been proposed, there is still a strong need for detailed experimental studies to foster the biological understanding of such collective motion phenomena. I will first describe the methods that we developed in the recent years to characterize social interactions between individuals involved in the coordination of swimming in groups of Rummy-nose tetra (Hemigrammus rhodostomus) from data gathered at the individual scale. This species of tropical fish performs burst-and-coast swimming behavior that consists of sudden heading changes combined with brief accelerations followed by quasi-passive, straight decelerations. Our results show that both attraction and alignment behaviors control the reaction of fish to a neighbor. Then I will present how these results can be used to build a model of spontaneous burst-and-coast swimming and social interactions of fish, with all parameters being estimated or directly measured from experiments. This model shows that the simple addition of the pairwise interactions with two neighbors quantitatively reproduces the collective behavior observed in groups of fish. Increasing the number of interacting neighbors does not significantly improve the simulation results. Remarkably, and even without confinement, we find that groups remain cohesive and polarized when each fish interacts with only one of its neighbors: the one that has the strongest contribution to the heading variation of the focal fish, dubbed as the “most influential neighbor". Overall, our results suggest that fish avoid information overload when they move in large groups since individuals only have to acquire a minimal amount of information about the behavior of their neighbors for coordinating their movements.

Acoustic Synchrony in Complex Calls

Synchrony between individuals or even non-living entities is one of the most striking natural phenomena: from clock pendulums that move in phase to fireflies that flash their light signals together and light up entire trees to crickets, katydids, cicadas and frogs that produce loud, synchronous acoustic choruses. The synchronising calls of species that have been hitherto investigated are however typically simple sound chirps or light flashes that are produced rhythmically at a particular rate.

Experiments in Animal Behaviour - Cutting-Edge Research at Trifling Cost. Gadagkar R

Animal Behaviour

Gadagkar - 2021 - Experiments in Animal Behaviour - Cutting-Edge Research at Trifling Cost. Indian Academy of Sciences, Bangalore. Access full text of this book at: https://www.ias.ac.in/Publications/e-Books/Experiments_in_Animal_Behaviour

In this book, I introduce readers to the study of animal behaviour by describing simple experiments, both old and new, designed to understand how and why animals behave the way they do.

A new tree cricket species in Mexico - Oecanthus rohiniae - has been named after CES faculty member Prof Rohini Balakrishnan

Oecanthus rohiniae

Picture credit: Bruno Govaerts

We are delighted that Nancy Collins, a renowned orthopterist, has named a newly discovered tree cricket species in Mexico - Oecanthus rohiniae - after the CES faculty member Prof Rohini Balakrishnan.

Division of labour in a primitive insect society

Division of Labor

In most social insect colonies, a single individual, the queen, is privileged to produce offspring while the rest of the members, the workers, spend their entire lives working for the welfare of the colony and rear the queen's offspring. In addition to such reproductive division of labour between the queens and her workers, sub-sets of workers divide non-reproductive labour among themselves, such as working at home versus going out to obtain food, for example. How the members of a colony agree on and bring about an efficient and conflict-free division of labour is of great interest.

Male crickets shift to safer mate attraction tactics when predation risk is high

predatingonO.henryi

The currency of success in nature is the number of offspring you leave behind, so individuals may employ alternative ways to achieve mating success under different conditions. For instance, males may attempt to mate sneakily instead of performing conspicuous courtship displays, which may attract predators. Predation risk is believed to be a factor that can drive individuals to switch between different mating tactics, but this has rarely been studied experimentally.

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