Studying Behavior
                          Ethology is the study of  animal behavior in their natural environment. Anthropomorphism is the tendency  to consider human feelings, reasoning and motivation to other animals.  Behavioral patterns are inherited to some extent and are subjected to  environmental influence and modification by experience. Concepts of innate  releasing mechanisms and drive do not explain actual behavior mechanisms. 
                        Learning and Behavior
                          Behavior can be modified  by learning in various ways. Habituation is a simple kind of learning involving  loss of sensitivity to unimportant stimuli. Imprinting is a type of learned  behavior with a significant innate component, acquired during a limited critical  period. Classical conditioning involves linking one stimulus with another.  Operant conditioning is a type of associative learning exhibited by many  animals. Insight learning involves the ability to reason by correctly  performing a task on the first attempt in a situation in which the animal had  no earlier experience.
                        Behavior Rhythms
                          Endogenous clocks dictate  various daily behaviors which in turn require exogenous cues to keep the  behavior properly times with the real world. Circannual behaviors such as  breeding and hibernation are directed by physiological and hormonal changes,  influenced by exogenous factors like day length.
                        Orientation and Navigation
                          Various behaviors  involving orientation and navigation are important determinants of animal  distribution. Kinesis is a random movement displaying a stimulus – specific  change in activity rate.
                        Foraging Behavior and competitive  Social Interaction
                          The large array of animal  feeding patterns has generated a varied performance of foraging behaviors.  Agonistic behavior involves a contest in which competitor gains an advantage in  obtaining access to a limited resource like food or mates. Dominance  hierarchies are shown by some animals with clear cut linear dominance.  Territoriality is the behavior in which an animal defends a specific fixed  portion of its home range against intrusion by other animals of the same  species through agonistic interactions.
                        Mating Behavior and Communication
                          Courtship interactions  are complex, species specific behaviors. Mating relationships which change  widely among different species include promiscuity, monogamy and polygamy.  Females invest much time and energy in carrying the young before birth, thus  discriminate selection of a mate is important. Animals communicate with one  another through their various senses. Odors are particularly effective signals  in many species as shown by the evolution of pheromones.
                        Altruistic Behavior and Human  Sociobiology
                          Altruistic behavior  benefits animals of the same species at the expense of the helpful individual.  Human behavior is probably more plastic than that of any other animal.  Sociobiologists view social behavior as having a genetic basis.