Why do praying mantises display a unique mating system, called sexual 
cannibalism, where a member of a male-female pair kills and consumes the
 other during courtship or copulation? At the end of every summer, why 
do more than 100 million monarch butterflies sweep across North America 
to overwinter further south in California and Mexico? Animal behavior is
 the study of these and other questions about why animals behave the way
 they do. 
The study of animal behavior begins with understanding
 how an animal’s physiology and anatomy are integrated with its 
behavior. Both external and internal stimuli prompt behaviors — external
 information (e.g., threats from other animals, sounds, smells) or 
weather and internal information (e.g., hunger, fear). Understanding how
 genes and the environment come together to shape animal behavior is 
also an important underpinning of the field. Genes capture the 
evolutionary responses of prior populations to selection on behavior. 
Environmental flexibility gives animals the opportunity to adjust to 
changes during their own lifetime. 
Scientists are drawn to the 
study of animal behavior for varied reasons and the field is extremely 
broad, ranging from research on feeding behavior and habitat selection 
to mating behavior and social organizations. Many scientists study 
animal behavior because it sheds light on human beings. Research on 
non-human primates, for instance, continues to offer valuable 
perspectives into the causes and evolution of individual, social, and 
reproductive human actions. Understanding why some animals help others 
at the potential cost of their own survival and reproduction, for 
example, not only gives us insight into their behavior but could also 
potentially help us to understand the underpinnings of our species' 
ideas of altruism and sacrifice.
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