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Term for maladaptive animal behavior that will lead to their demise?


Term for words indicating capability other than “adjective”What is the name of the study of animal mind and behavior?Term for homophones that have opposite meanings?What determines gender-specific names used for different animal species?A term to describe the phenomenon that people are more comfortable sleeping in their own bedIs there a term for sentences which structurally reflect their meaning?Term for “representative” animal sound?Is there a gender neutral term for a single animal of the Bovine species?Is there a term for an animal that died of a disease?A term for when people insist on giving you help you didn't ask for?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








2















Moths to a flame.



Is there a term for such a behavior?










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  • 1





    In some salmon, etc., the behavior is 'semelparity' ("the characteristic of usually mating only once in a lifetime"), or 'suicidal reproduction'. Moths are a different kettle of fish, although some moths are semelparous as well as being inadvertently suicidal by being attracted to light.

    – JEL
    1 hour ago











  • Sacrificial behaviour; self sacrifice; (both are possible leads). Wiki has a page on Altruism (biology) which is more promising.

    – Hugh
    46 mins ago











  • IIRC the moths are simply using an over-simple algorithm -- they are trying to navigate by starlight, which depends on the light source being very far away, so that the moth's angle to the light source effectively never changes. There are other insects, however, that practice autothysis -- deliberately exploding themselves, usually to protect their fellows. Dunno if that's considered malaptive or not, but it does lead to their demise :)

    – Jeremy Friesner
    44 secs ago


















2















Moths to a flame.



Is there a term for such a behavior?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Bob516 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 1





    In some salmon, etc., the behavior is 'semelparity' ("the characteristic of usually mating only once in a lifetime"), or 'suicidal reproduction'. Moths are a different kettle of fish, although some moths are semelparous as well as being inadvertently suicidal by being attracted to light.

    – JEL
    1 hour ago











  • Sacrificial behaviour; self sacrifice; (both are possible leads). Wiki has a page on Altruism (biology) which is more promising.

    – Hugh
    46 mins ago











  • IIRC the moths are simply using an over-simple algorithm -- they are trying to navigate by starlight, which depends on the light source being very far away, so that the moth's angle to the light source effectively never changes. There are other insects, however, that practice autothysis -- deliberately exploding themselves, usually to protect their fellows. Dunno if that's considered malaptive or not, but it does lead to their demise :)

    – Jeremy Friesner
    44 secs ago














2












2








2








Moths to a flame.



Is there a term for such a behavior?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Bob516 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












Moths to a flame.



Is there a term for such a behavior?







terminology animal






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Bob516 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this question









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Bob516 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 33 mins ago







Bob516













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asked 2 hours ago









Bob516Bob516

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Bob516 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 1





    In some salmon, etc., the behavior is 'semelparity' ("the characteristic of usually mating only once in a lifetime"), or 'suicidal reproduction'. Moths are a different kettle of fish, although some moths are semelparous as well as being inadvertently suicidal by being attracted to light.

    – JEL
    1 hour ago











  • Sacrificial behaviour; self sacrifice; (both are possible leads). Wiki has a page on Altruism (biology) which is more promising.

    – Hugh
    46 mins ago











  • IIRC the moths are simply using an over-simple algorithm -- they are trying to navigate by starlight, which depends on the light source being very far away, so that the moth's angle to the light source effectively never changes. There are other insects, however, that practice autothysis -- deliberately exploding themselves, usually to protect their fellows. Dunno if that's considered malaptive or not, but it does lead to their demise :)

    – Jeremy Friesner
    44 secs ago













  • 1





    In some salmon, etc., the behavior is 'semelparity' ("the characteristic of usually mating only once in a lifetime"), or 'suicidal reproduction'. Moths are a different kettle of fish, although some moths are semelparous as well as being inadvertently suicidal by being attracted to light.

    – JEL
    1 hour ago











  • Sacrificial behaviour; self sacrifice; (both are possible leads). Wiki has a page on Altruism (biology) which is more promising.

    – Hugh
    46 mins ago











  • IIRC the moths are simply using an over-simple algorithm -- they are trying to navigate by starlight, which depends on the light source being very far away, so that the moth's angle to the light source effectively never changes. There are other insects, however, that practice autothysis -- deliberately exploding themselves, usually to protect their fellows. Dunno if that's considered malaptive or not, but it does lead to their demise :)

    – Jeremy Friesner
    44 secs ago








1




1





In some salmon, etc., the behavior is 'semelparity' ("the characteristic of usually mating only once in a lifetime"), or 'suicidal reproduction'. Moths are a different kettle of fish, although some moths are semelparous as well as being inadvertently suicidal by being attracted to light.

– JEL
1 hour ago





In some salmon, etc., the behavior is 'semelparity' ("the characteristic of usually mating only once in a lifetime"), or 'suicidal reproduction'. Moths are a different kettle of fish, although some moths are semelparous as well as being inadvertently suicidal by being attracted to light.

– JEL
1 hour ago













Sacrificial behaviour; self sacrifice; (both are possible leads). Wiki has a page on Altruism (biology) which is more promising.

– Hugh
46 mins ago





Sacrificial behaviour; self sacrifice; (both are possible leads). Wiki has a page on Altruism (biology) which is more promising.

– Hugh
46 mins ago













IIRC the moths are simply using an over-simple algorithm -- they are trying to navigate by starlight, which depends on the light source being very far away, so that the moth's angle to the light source effectively never changes. There are other insects, however, that practice autothysis -- deliberately exploding themselves, usually to protect their fellows. Dunno if that's considered malaptive or not, but it does lead to their demise :)

– Jeremy Friesner
44 secs ago






IIRC the moths are simply using an over-simple algorithm -- they are trying to navigate by starlight, which depends on the light source being very far away, so that the moth's angle to the light source effectively never changes. There are other insects, however, that practice autothysis -- deliberately exploding themselves, usually to protect their fellows. Dunno if that's considered malaptive or not, but it does lead to their demise :)

– Jeremy Friesner
44 secs ago











1 Answer
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Maybe you can describe them as self destructive.






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  • I am hoping there is a specific term for the maladaptive behavior so I could look up other animals with a similar behavior.

    – Bob516
    58 mins ago











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active

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active

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active

oldest

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2














Maybe you can describe them as self destructive.






share|improve this answer























  • I am hoping there is a specific term for the maladaptive behavior so I could look up other animals with a similar behavior.

    – Bob516
    58 mins ago















2














Maybe you can describe them as self destructive.






share|improve this answer























  • I am hoping there is a specific term for the maladaptive behavior so I could look up other animals with a similar behavior.

    – Bob516
    58 mins ago













2












2








2







Maybe you can describe them as self destructive.






share|improve this answer













Maybe you can describe them as self destructive.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



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answered 1 hour ago









Margaret PollackMargaret Pollack

811




811












  • I am hoping there is a specific term for the maladaptive behavior so I could look up other animals with a similar behavior.

    – Bob516
    58 mins ago

















  • I am hoping there is a specific term for the maladaptive behavior so I could look up other animals with a similar behavior.

    – Bob516
    58 mins ago
















I am hoping there is a specific term for the maladaptive behavior so I could look up other animals with a similar behavior.

– Bob516
58 mins ago





I am hoping there is a specific term for the maladaptive behavior so I could look up other animals with a similar behavior.

– Bob516
58 mins ago










Bob516 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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