Author:
Bels Vincent L.,Pallandre Jean-Pierre,Pelle Eric,Kirchhoff Florence
Abstract
Postures and movements have been one of the major modes of human expression for understanding and depicting organisms in their environment. In ethology, behavioral sequence analysis is a relevant method to describe animal behavior and to answer Tinbergen’s four questions testing the causes of development, mechanism, adaptation, and evolution of behaviors. In functional morphology (and in biomechanics), the analysis of behavioral sequences establishes the motor pattern and opens the discussion on the links between “form” and “function”. We propose here the concept of neuroethological morphology in order to build a holistic framework for understanding animal behavior. This concept integrates ethology with functional morphology, and physics. Over the past hundred years, parallel developments in both disciplines have been rooted in the study of the sequential organization of animal behavior. This concept allows for testing genetic, epigenetic, and evo-devo predictions of phenotypic traits between structures, performances, behavior, and fitness in response to environmental constraints. Based on a review of the literature, we illustrate this concept with two behavioral cases: (i) capture behavior in squamates, and (ii) the ritualistic throat display in lizards.
Subject
General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology
Reference109 articles.
1. Art As A Human Behavior: Toward An Ethological View of Art
2. Representation of movement in the Upper Palaeolithic: An ethological approach to the interpretation of parietal art;Azéma;Anthropozoologica,2008
3. Palaeolithic parietal art and its topographical context;Eastham,1991
4. Dunamis and the Science of Mechanics: Aristotle on Animal Motion
5. Aristotle’s Model of Animal Motion
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献