Talk:Behavioral ecology: Difference between revisions
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I am a Teaching Assistant for a Behavioral Ecology class which is intending on greatly extending this article. We will be basing these revisions on ''Davies, Krebs, West, An Introduction to Behavioral Ecology''. We will be using one class session to add the majority of these changes so they likely appear as a barrage of additions and edits. We have been expanding many articles throughout the semester and are very familiar with proper formatting and citation usage. We hope this will spur more interest into this subject as we will be linking many of the evolutionary concepts and animal examples to this page as is appropriate.Gsibbel 21:13, 27 November 2012 (UTC) |
I am a Teaching Assistant for a Behavioral Ecology class which is intending on greatly extending this article. We will be basing these revisions on ''Davies, Krebs, West, An Introduction to Behavioral Ecology''. We will be using one class session to add the majority of these changes so they likely appear as a barrage of additions and edits. We have been expanding many articles throughout the semester and are very familiar with proper formatting and citation usage. We hope this will spur more interest into this subject as we will be linking many of the evolutionary concepts and animal examples to this page as is appropriate.Gsibbel 21:13, 27 November 2012 (UTC) |
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::Hi. I have used writing Wikipedia articles as a teaching aid in the past and this was a very positive experience for the students. I am a little concerned, however, that you appear to be intending to use only one text for the sorce material. One issue that this article needs to address is its lack of references. May I suggest that your students use several sources. This is also likely to avoid potential plagiarism of the Davies et al. book. Best of luck in the exercise.__[[User:DrChrissy|DrChrissy]] ([[User talk:DrChrissy|talk]]) 17:01, 28 November 2012 (UTC) |
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Page rewritten 5 July 2005 by Craig Barnett. Only the first sentance remains from the first post.
Merger proposal
Behavioral ecology and ethoecology are really just the same thing but with different names. So, we should move everything from ethoecology into behavioral ecology (even though ethoecology is a more interesting name). It wouldn't make a huge difference since there isn't much in ethoecology anyway. --Skyler :^| 21:19, 18 April 2009 (UTC)
- Not a good idea! ethoecology is a meaningless Americanism. The term Behavioural ecology has been coined for a great many years now and is understood. It may be worth considering having a note in the Behavioural Ecology section to the effect that it may also be referred to as ethoecology. The study of ethology is a much finer field than the study of behaviour and thus this should be reflected in the umbrella title of the section. —Preceding unsigned comment added by FatPumpkin (talk • contribs) 08:44, 5 May 2009 (UTC)
- I don't think you understand. Ethoecology, "the meaningless Americanism," would no longer be an article and any extra information that it holds not within the Behavioral ecology page would be transferred. That would probably only be a sentence or two. --Skyler :^| 01:09, 21 May 2009 (UTC)
This sounds like a good idea then. As stated in my original post I would agree with the general title being "Behavioural Ecology" and maybe including a short paragraph documenting ethoecology. I was just making sure we were not proposing having a combined title of "Behavioural Ecology/Ethoecology"FatPumpkin (talk) 09:01, 27 May 2009 (UTC)
- I would merge them, in fact, I would put ethoecology as a subsection under behavioral ecology (BE) (and then I'd put HBE under BE, but that's another merger discussion). Overall, etheocology is not a very developed article, and so it would fit nicely into BE. Rhetth (talk) 21:44, 29 May 2009 (UTC)
- I agree. I'm not sure what to do with the ethoecology article then, though. -Skyler 19:29, 25 June 2009 (UTC)
It's not even ethnoecology, it's etoecology. As far as I can tell it is a term that has been made up by some group in Argentina. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.254.241.131 (talk) 20:33, 10 October 2009 (UTC)
Merged. Though in fact there was nothing of any value at Etoecology, so there was nothing to merge. SNALWIBMA ( talk - contribs ) 23:08, 27 October 2009 (UTC)
Please Explain
Phylogenetic constraints are generally factors that might stop certain lineages developing certain behavioral or morphological traits. Hence, it is no coincidence that generally birds are able to fly and mammals cannot. The evolutionary history of these lineages have made it profitable for birds to fly and for mammalian feet to remain planted on the ground.
Please explain what you mean by this, so I can rewrite it. What "factors" are you talking about?
72.8.108.76 17:10, 9 February 2007 (UTC)
Optimization should be written
The current article on optimization is maths based and shows little mention of biological optimality. Some one should either add it to the existing article or create Optimization (biology) or Optimality modeling. Jack (talk) 16:31, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
Convergent evolution
The relationship with Convergent evolution seems obvious, but is not discussed. Also, "Helpers at the nest" is an obvious example not mentioned. (Btw, you would think there should be a better term for "helpers at the nest".) ~E 74.60.29.141 (talk) 00:08, 20 October 2012 (UTC)
The lead, etc.
The lead [Brit: lede] -imo- seems to rely too heavily on anecdotal interpolation to simply explain "What is this?"; rather, it should briefly define the topic and hopefully include a mention relating to each section of the article. The "for example..." and "for instance.." [stuff] should be relegated to the sections of the main article. Btw, the foundation of 'Behavioral ecology' seems to be almost entirely based on anecdotal synthesis/interpolation. I suspect that somebody came up with a cool-sounding buzzword for an NSF grant; and worked backward from there. "Behavioral ecology" should be something similar to: the study of behavioral inter-relational dependency networks, - not intra- ... But I digress; my point is simply that the lead could be more clear and concise, with anecdotal examples reserved primarily for the article. ~Eric F 74.60.29.141 (talk) 01:00, 20 October 2012 (UTC)
- I agree with Eric. This is a huge topic but the lede is confusing for the lay reader. I believe it should be very brief and simple, e.g. 'Behavioral ecology, or ethoecology, is the study of the ecological and evolutionary basis for animal behavior, and the roles of behavior in enabling an animal to adapt to its environment.'.
- I would be tempted to leave out or de-emphasise 'ethoecology': This is not a term I have heard or read - perhaps a US only word?
- Once there is a simple lede, other matters can be dealt with under headings such as 'History', 'Development', 'Theories'.
- I find it rather surprising that for such a large subject there are only 4 references. This needs to be adressed.
- __DrChrissy (talk) 18:05, 20 October 2012 (UTC)
Behavioral Ecology disambiguation needed
I think an Disambiguation pages is needed here, as there is now an wiki page for Behavioral Ecology An example content for such page could be:
"Behavioral Ecology is the subject of:
- Intersection of the research fields of ethology and ecology
- Behavioral Ecology, a scientific journal
Upcoming Revisions
I am a Teaching Assistant for a Behavioral Ecology class which is intending on greatly extending this article. We will be basing these revisions on Davies, Krebs, West, An Introduction to Behavioral Ecology. We will be using one class session to add the majority of these changes so they likely appear as a barrage of additions and edits. We have been expanding many articles throughout the semester and are very familiar with proper formatting and citation usage. We hope this will spur more interest into this subject as we will be linking many of the evolutionary concepts and animal examples to this page as is appropriate.Gsibbel 21:13, 27 November 2012 (UTC)
- Hi. I have used writing Wikipedia articles as a teaching aid in the past and this was a very positive experience for the students. I am a little concerned, however, that you appear to be intending to use only one text for the sorce material. One issue that this article needs to address is its lack of references. May I suggest that your students use several sources. This is also likely to avoid potential plagiarism of the Davies et al. book. Best of luck in the exercise.__DrChrissy (talk) 17:01, 28 November 2012 (UTC)
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