Have you ever wondered how animals know so much? This is very easy. It all depends on how they behave and what they know. When animals are born, it has instincts. These instincts help living beings survive and make them act in some way. This is called congenital behavior. However, a few things were taught. Unlike congenital behavior, it comes from genes and needs to learn other behaviors. They are called learning behaviors. Together, innate learning behavior can prove that animals are wiser than most people think.
Animal behavior studies are behavioral. Animal behavior has two basic categories. Learning behavior and congenital or genetic behavior. Learning behavior refers to the knowledge that animals acquire through experience about their behavior. Unlike learning behavior, natural behaviors occur naturally in animals. In other words, an animal essentially takes a specific action. To find an appropriate environment, animals use the specified behavior. Two types of directional action are taxis and sports. Taxis are the natural ability of an animal to understand if stimulation is appropriate. Kinesis is defined as a random movement that does not appear in response to stimuli (Lab # 12)
Like all other animals, these isopods show many kinds of responses to sensory inputs (reactions known as behavior). The study of behavior of animals is called behavior. Two simple categories of behavior are learning and congenital (inherited). The behavior that animals use to put themselves in the most advantageous environment is called oriented behavior. When an animal is stimulated by light, heat, moisture, sounds or chemicals, they usually show a taxi and animals are moving towards or away from stimulants. The opposite is exercise, which is a random movement and does not lead to a direction to the stimulus. The behavior of other animals is called behavior by agnosticists. This behavior is indicated when animals react with each other in a positive or adaptive reaction. In many cases, these unknown behaviors are the way to assert dominance.