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What's the difference between acquired behavior and innate behavior in animals?

2006-12-10 08:05:07 · 4 answers · asked by megan6288 1 in Science & Mathematics Biology

4 answers

Innate behavior means that the behavior is inheritable or genetically programs. Example: the behavior of many insect toward attracting mates such as cricket sounds or frog sounds are innate behaviors.

Acquired behavior means the behavior is learned from external enviroment and is not inheritable. Example: human learns how to hunt. So hunting is an acquired behavior.

2006-12-10 08:16:28 · answer #1 · answered by Dr. Zoo 3 · 0 0

Define Innate Behavior

2016-12-13 05:40:48 · answer #2 · answered by klosterman 4 · 0 0

Innate Behavior Definition

2016-10-03 03:29:41 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Innate behavior is that with which an animal is born. A mother giving birth to young ones and those young ones instinctively knowing how to suckle. Neither one was taught these behaviors, they knew them instinctively. Acquired behaviors are those that are learned. When the young ones get older they learn to forage for food and water.

2006-12-10 08:23:42 · answer #4 · answered by Oenophile... (Lynn) 5 · 0 0

Innate behavior is "instinct." what an animal does naturally. Acquired behavior is behavior the animal has learned. A dog will innately chase a cat but it can learn not to chase cats.

2006-12-10 08:12:06 · answer #5 · answered by darkdiva 6 · 1 0

That is a difficult question. Just from a practical and cognitive point of view, aggressive behavior is likely to occur as a direct means to an end. Aggression can be defined as a behavior that does not consider the feelings of others and transgresses the personal space of another person. Since infants do not have a concept of self as opposed to the personal space of another, they are likely to cross the boundaries of another person without even "thinking" about it, literally. Does that mean aggression is innate, or does it mean aggressive is a natural act that is likely to occur whether people know what they are doing ot not, without any intent to be aggressive? Is it that an act cannot be considered truly "aggressive" unless there is intent and it is a rational action? Or is it merely a descriptive term? Children will aggress because they are not cognitively capable of realizing that their act is aggressive. I would say that once a person understands and comprehends the intent of their act and they act anyway, than they are aggressive, in which case it can be seen as a learned way of getting what they desire.

2016-03-13 13:23:20 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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This is a classic Nature vs Nurture question. It all depends on what you think is more important in shaping behavior, biology, or how someone is brought up. In short, this is a question that humans have tried to answer for centuries.

2016-04-10 05:14:37 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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