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Whether among fowl, frogs, crustaceans, insects, or elsewhere in the animal kingdom, aggressive behavior as a means of protecting territory and establishing sexual dominance doesn’t always mean a fight to the death. This program gives clear examples of this in a variety of situations, including a barnyard segment where conflict between members of the hierarchy and other less-dominant groups is quickly defused due to lack of space. (24 minutes)



 
    

Item#: This title is currently not available.
Copyright date: ©1990



Part of the Series : Gender and Reproduction: A Natural History
     


Only available in the US, Canada, Australia/New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Malta and South Africa.




Mating Signals

Vibrations and songs, emissions of light, chemical signals and sexual odors-each species has its own method of signalling the other sex that the time is ripe for procreation. Depending on the social behavior of a species, males and females may have a...(more details)
 
The Rituals of Courtship

To ogle or preen, to dance, to feel, to ask to dinner or flaunt one's power literally or symbolically, to cloak one's intentions or air them freely-man has no monopoly on this catalogue of seductive behavior. From what appears like the tender, consid...(more details)
 
The Regulation of Social Organization

This program looks at social organization in the animal kingdom and at the stark contrast between the fierceness that often precedes copulation and the gentleness accorded the resulting young. The social life of animals is strictly regulated-very dif...(more details)
 
Recognizing Gender Differences

According to species, the sexes are recognizable to one another by shape, size, behavior, sound, odor. The program covers a range of animal behaviors, from gift-giving to aggression to what in humans would be called caressing-what should we call it i...(more details)
 
Behavioral and Biological Differences

Behavioral and social differences between the sexes in humans may be cultural, but some at least are clearly linked to biology. Using as an example an African village where the roles of sexes are strictly defined, this program shows that, in humans, ...(more details)
 


See additional titles in Human Anatomy & Physiology | Animal Biology