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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Analysing the compound discriminative stimulus effects of cyclazocine in rats

Chamberlain, Sherelle January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
2

Evolution and its implications for ethics

Turner, Carla January 2014 (has links)
In this dissertation I will consider the extent to which our ethical actions are determined by evolution, as well as the consequences of a view that holds that ethical behaviour arose from evolutionary processes. I will further investigate whether evolution can supply a complete account of ethics in the physical world, without sacrificing human freedom and rationality. To do this, I will start by considering the possible negative consequences of applying evolution to human behaviour, in the forms of Social Darwinism and eugenics. I will argue that while these systems of thought are ethically and scientifically unsound, there is strong evidence for the evolutionary origins of ethics, where ethics can be seen as an adaptation that offers a benefit to the individual exhibiting this behaviour. This view is supported by sociobiology, studies in primate behaviour and neuroscience. The implications of ethics as an evolutionary adaptation will be compared to Kantian morality, which is premised on freedom and autonomy, which I will argue are inconsistent with some scientific explanations. While an evolutionary account of ethics can lead to a deterministic view of our behaviour, new developments in neuroscience claim that freedom is an evolutionary adaptation. This naturally developed freedom, combined with self-consciousness, can supply us with an evolutionary account of ethics that does not need augmentation from transcendental principles. / Dissertation (MA)--University of Pretoria, 2014. / lk2014 / Philosophy / MA / Unrestricted
3

Termite raiding by the Ponerine ant Pachycondyla analis (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) : behavioural and chemical ecology

Yusuf, Abdullahi Ahmed 23 October 2010 (has links)
The ant Pachycondyla analis (formerly Megaponera foetens, commonly known as the Matabele ant) is a widespread ponerine in sub-Saharan Africa. It feeds solely on termites of economic importance belonging to the sub-family Macrotermitinae. These termites are captured during organised raids on their nests and galleries. Previous studies mostly concentrated on certain aspects of the raiding behaviour and trail laying pheromones in this species. Thus the detailed raiding behaviour and chemically-mediated communication between P. analis and its prey are virtually unknown. The aim of this study was to undertake detailed behavioural studies on termite raiding behaviour of P. analis, and to investigate whether P. analis uses olfactory cues for intra-specific communication during termite raids, and for detecting its prey. Termite raiding behaviour of P. analis was monitored at Mpala, a Kenyan savannah for six months (April to September, 2007). During this period, raids were found to occur mainly in the mornings and evenings, with late night raids occurring during dry periods. P. analis at Mpala mainly nests under rocks and in deserted termite mounds. Microtermes and Odontotermes were the main preyed termite genera, and ant raiding behaviour was synchronised with termite prey behaviour, and was influenced by foraging costs, prey defences and rewards. Olfactometric assays showed that P. analis workers used olfactory cues in their intra-specific chemical communication, with workers responding more to volatiles of individuals of the same size class (major to major and minor to minor) than between groups. Major workers discriminated more between the volatiles of the two groups than minor workers. GC-MS analysis of volatiles from major and minor workers revealed a cocktail of 48 compounds, majority of which were hydrocarbons. Volatile compounds were colony specific and quantitative analysis showed that major and minor workers alone released 2.5 fold more volatiles than the mixed stages. This suggests that ants have the innate ability to regulate the levels of the colony odour which they make up for with higher release levels when separated from each other. Using a Mandible Opening Response (MOR) bioassay, ants were able to distinguish between nestmates and non-nestmates based on cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) profiles. This suggests that P. analis uses CHCs as short range contact recognition cues within the nest in traditional nest protection and during raids on termite species. GC-MS analyses revealed hydrocarbons of chain lengths in the range C8-C31 in the CHC profiles, comprising mainly alkanes, alkenes and methyl-branched alkanes. The CHCs were colony and individual worker specific. Nestmate recognition in P. analis may be encoded in the alkenes and methyl-branched alkanes. Dual choice olfactometric assays revealed that P. analis uses olfactory cues in locating potential termite sources with an average of 65% of workers choosing odours against the blank (clean air). When termite odours were offered to both major and minor workers, their choices were biased towards the termite odours, with minor workers attracted more to the odours than were major workers. Although ants responded to odours from the soil obtained for the termite gallery, overall, odours from termites inside their galleries were the most attractive to ants. These results suggest that the combined odours from both the termites and gallery components (in particular soil), serves as an effective nest location cue for the ants. Comparative GC-MS analyses showed that the composition of the volatiles from the gallery soil was richer than that released by the termites. Consistent with previous studies, the volatiles of the gallery soil were found to contain hydrocarbons, naphthalene and derivatives of this compound. In conclusion, these studies have revealed the rich diversity of chemical communication cues used by this ant species for nestmate recognition and for prey location during raids in search for its food source. / Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2010. / Zoology and Entomology / unrestricted
4

Spécialisation hémisphérique de la reconnaissance de sa propre voix

Rosa, Christine January 2008 (has links)
Thèse numérisée par la Division de la gestion de documents et des archives de l'Université de Montréal.
5

Spécialisation hémisphérique de la reconnaissance de sa propre voix

Rosa, Christine January 2008 (has links)
Thèse numérisée par la Division de la gestion de documents et des archives de l'Université de Montréal
6

Beteendesyndrom hos blankål (Anguilla anguilla): aktivitet och respons på främmande objekt i en artificiell miljö / Behavioural syndromes in silver eel (Anguilla anguilla): activity and response to novel objects in an artificial environment

Ingelman Åslund, Trollet January 2020 (has links)
Ökad kunskap om djurs beteendesyndrom kan möjliggöra förbättrade bevarandeåtgärder för hotade arter. I den här studien genomgick 108 blankålar (Anguilla anguilla) två beteendetester; “open-field test” och “novel-object test”. Ålars morfologi och val av föda, habitat och dygnsaktivitet har i tidigare studier visats hänga ihop. I den här studien undersökte jag om det fanns något samband mellan ålarnas morfologi, aktivitet samt respons på främmande föremål. De ålar som var mest aktiva under open-field-testet var också de ålar som visade störst intresse för det främmande föremålet i novel-object-testet. Det fanns dock inte något samband mellan morfologi och aktivitet eller mellan morfologi och respons på främmande föremål. Detta innebär att ett utforskande och djärvt beteendesyndrom har upptäckts hos vissa av ålarna, medan den bakomliggande faktorn fortsätter vara okänd. / Increased knowledge of behavioural syndromes may contribute to enhancing our conservation methods for endangered species. In this study, the behavior of 108 silver eels (Anguilla anguilla) was assessed in two assays: an open-field test and a novel-object test. Eel morphology and diel activity as well as diet and habitat use have previously been shown to correlate with each other. In this study, I investigated the potential relationship between the morphology, activity and response to a novel object. The most active eels during the open-field test were also the ones that expressed the most interest for the novel object. There was, however, no correlation between morphology and activity or morphology and response to the novel object. This means an exploring and bold behaviour syndrome was discovered amongst some of the eels, whilst the underlying cause remains unknown.

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