Behaviour of living things

Behaviour of living things

What is behaviour?

Behaviour: is the actions and movements that living things perform in response to different conditions that affect them.

 

The importance of behaviour for living things

Behaviour helps living things live in the environment.

 

Stimuli

The Behaviour occurs in a living thing when it is exposed to a stimulus.

Stimuli: the different conditions that a living thing responds to by performing a specific behavior.

Examples:

  • When an animal is thirsty, it goes to drink water.

Thirst is called stimuli, and drinking water is called behaviour.

  • When desert animals feel the heat, they hide in their burrows.

The feeling of heat is called stimuli, and hiding in burrows is called behaviour.

Stimuli

Types of stimuli

Internal stimuli:

conditions that occur inside a living thing's body.

Example:

A living thing sleeps (behavior) when it feels sleepy (internal stimuli).

 

External stimuli:

conditions that surround the living thing.

Example:

The animal splashes water on its body (behaviour) when it feels hot (external stimuli).

Internal and external stimuli

Types of behaviour

Innate behaviour:

It is the behaviour that is born with the living thing and does not require training.

Examples:

  • The feeding of some animals' young by their mothers.
  • The mother's care for her young.
  • The spider builds a web to catch insects.
  • The migration of birds to warmer regions in cold times.

Innate behaviour

Learned behaviour:

It is the behaviour that humans or animals acquire through training.

Examples:

  • Humans learn to read and write.
  • The child learns to ride a bicycle.
  • The bird trains its young to fly.
  • The dolphin is trained to play with the ball.

Learned behaviour

Living things behave in different ways when caring for their young, such as:

  • Providing food.
  • Helping to walk.
  • Protection from danger.

إعداد : شبكة منهاجي التعليمية

03 / 08 / 2023

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