Animal Behaviour |
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Page 7
... course of their random movements , and they , too , stay ; thus many soon collect . But this does not account for the seemingly social assem- blages of Paramecia where there is no such substance to arrest their progress . Dr. Jennings ...
... course of their random movements , and they , too , stay ; thus many soon collect . But this does not account for the seemingly social assem- blages of Paramecia where there is no such substance to arrest their progress . Dr. Jennings ...
Page 8
... course of their random movements , into such a A I II III IV Fia , 2. — Behaviour of Paramecia ( after Jennings ) . centre they remain there and help to swell the numbers in the cluster . If Paramecia be placed in water to which a dis ...
... course of their random movements , into such a A I II III IV Fia , 2. — Behaviour of Paramecia ( after Jennings ) . centre they remain there and help to swell the numbers in the cluster . If Paramecia be placed in water to which a dis ...
Page 9
... course of such a Paramecium is shown in Fig . 2 , IV . If , instead of a faintly acid drop , a little alkaline liquid be introduced beneath the cover - glass , the Paramecium similarly jerks backward and turns aside on reaching its ...
... course of such a Paramecium is shown in Fig . 2 , IV . If , instead of a faintly acid drop , a little alkaline liquid be introduced beneath the cover - glass , the Paramecium similarly jerks backward and turns aside on reaching its ...
Page 16
... course of a few weeks those splendid " beams , " with their " tynes " and " snags , " which , in the case of the wapiti , even in the confinement of our Zoological Gardens , may reach a weight of thirty - two pounds , and which , in the ...
... course of a few weeks those splendid " beams , " with their " tynes " and " snags , " which , in the case of the wapiti , even in the confinement of our Zoological Gardens , may reach a weight of thirty - two pounds , and which , in the ...
Page 18
... course pursued by the historical development of scientific knowledge . The function of biological science is to formulate and to express in generalized terms the related antecedences and sequences which are observed to occur in animals ...
... course pursued by the historical development of scientific knowledge . The function of biological science is to formulate and to express in generalized terms the related antecedences and sequences which are observed to occur in animals ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquired action afford animal behaviour Animal Intelligence ants arise association bees biological end biological value birds C. R. ASHBEE caterpillars cells centres chick cloth co-ordination coalescence complex conation conative tendency congenital conscious situation consciousness course Crown 8vo Darwin definite Demy 8vo differentiated direct Edition effects eggs elements emotional evolution experience fact factor female further germinal substance guidance habit hereditary heredity hypothesis ideal ideational Illustrations impulse individual infer influence inherited insects instinctive acts instinctive behaviour intelligent behaviour larva larvæ male meaning mental development modes of behaviour natural selection nervous system nest object observation organic behaviour ovum Paramecia Paramecium pecks perceptual play pleasure present Prince Kropotkine probably Professor Groos psychological question rational reflex reflex action regarded response result seems seize sense sentience sexual selection social solitary wasps species spider spinal stage stimulus survival term tion wasps young
Popular passages
Page 288 - In other words, those races of beings only can have survived in which, on the average, agreeable or desired feelings went along with activities conducive to the maintenance of life, while disagreeable and habitually-avoided feelings went along with activities directly or indirectly destructive of life...
Page 306 - The consciousness of brutes would appear to be related to the mechanism of their body simply as a collateral product of its working, and to be as completely without any power of modifying that working as the steam-whistle which accompanies the work of a locomotive engine is without influence upon its machinery.
Page 149 - ... When put into the box the cat would show evident signs of discomfort and of an impulse to escape from confinement. It tries to squeeze through any opening ; it claws and bites at the bars or wire; it thrusts its paws out through any opening and claws at everything it reaches ; it continues its efforts when it strikes anything loose and shaky; it may claw at things within the box. It does not pay very much attention to the food outside, but seems simply to strive instinctively to escape from confinement....
Page 223 - When we see an ant-hill, tenanted by thousands of industrious inhabitants, excavating chambers, forming tunnels, making roads, guarding their home, gathering food, feeding the young, tending their domestic animals, — each one fulfilling its duties industriously, and without confusion, — it is difficult altogether to deny to them the gift of reason ; and the preceding observations tend to confirm the opinion that their mental powers differ from those of men, not so much in kind as in degree.
Page 63 - For my own part, I look upon it as upon the principle of gravitation in bodies, which is not to be explained by any known qualities inherent in the bodies themselves, nor from any laws of mechanism, but, according to the best notions of the greatest philosophers, is an immediate impression from the first mover, and the divine energy acting in the creatures.
Page 306 - It may be assumed, then, that molecular changes in the brain are the causes of all the states of consciousness of brutes. Is there any evidence that these states of consciousness may, conversely, cause those molecular changes which give rise to muscular motion? I see no such evidence. The frog walks, hops, swims, and goes through his gymnastic performances quite as well without consciousness, and consequently without volition, as with it; and, if a frog, in his natural state, possesses anything corresponding...
Page 226 - Jaeger remarks,' how difficult it is to approach animals in a herd or troop. Wild horses and cattle do not, I believe, make any danger-signal; but the attitude of any one of them who first discovers an enemy warns the others. Rabbits stamp loudly on the ground with their hind feet as a signal; sheep and chamois do the same with their forefeet, uttering likewise a whistle.
Page 22 - Thornton. A SPORTING TOUR THROUGH THE NORTHERN PARTS OF ENGLAND AND GREAT PART OF THE HIGHLANDS OF SCOTLAND. By Colonel T. THORNTON, of Thornville Royal, in Yorkshire. With the Original Illustrations by GARRARD, and other Illustrations and Coloured Plates by GE LODGE. 'Sportsmen of all descriptions will gladly welcome the sumptuous new edition issued by Mr. Edward Arnold of Colonel T. Thornton's Sporting Tour," which has long been a scarce book.
Page 128 - In filling up her nest she put her head down into it and bit away the loose earth from the sides, letting it fall to the bottom of the burrow, and then, after a quantity had accumulated, jammed it down with her head. Earth was then brought from the outside and pressed in, and then more was bitten from the sides. When, at last, the filling was level with the ground, she brought a quantity of fine grains of dirt to the spot and picking up a small pebble in her mandibles, used it as a hammer in pounding...
Page 50 - That therefore, on the whole, the theory of Wallace and Bates is supported by the facts detailed in this and the author's former papers, so far as they deal with birds (and with the one mammal used).