26.2
View the full transcript and gain access to JoVE Core videos
Q1: What is the critical period in animal imprinting?
The critical period is a brief time window shortly after birth or hatching during which imprinting must occur. In goslings, this window lasts only the first day of life. If an appropriate imprinting stimulus is not present during this time, the animal will never imprint at all, and the opportunity is permanently lost.
Q2: Why do mother sheep imprint onto their lambs?
Mother sheep imprint onto their lambs' scent within hours of birth to recognize and care for their own offspring within a large herd. Since many females give birth simultaneously, imprinting allows mothers to selectively identify their lambs among many others, ensuring they provide appropriate parental care and protection.
Q3: Can imprinting be reversed after the critical period ends?
No, imprinting is irreversible. Once the critical period ends, the object of imprinting cannot be changed. Goslings that imprint onto a human during their first day will continue following that person throughout their lives, even when later exposed to their biological mother or other adult geese.
Q4: How did Konrad Lorenz demonstrate that imprinting is learned behavior?
Lorenz showed that goslings imprint onto the first large, moving object they encounter during the critical period, whether it was their mother, siblings, a person, or even an inanimate object. This demonstrated that although the instinct to imprint is innate, the specific object of imprinting is determined by environmental exposure and learning.
Q5: What happens to goslings if their mother is absent during the critical period?
Goslings will imprint onto the first large moving object they encounter, which could be a person or any substitute stimulus. Once imprinted, they will always follow this imprinting stimulus and ignore their biological mother, demonstrating that the specific target of imprinting depends entirely on what is present during the critical period.
Q6: How does imprinting increase offspring survival?
Imprinting creates a strong, long-lasting bond between parents and offspring, enabling parents to protect their young and teach them essential survival skills. This attachment ensures offspring remain close to their parents for guidance and defense, significantly increasing their chances of survival during vulnerable early-life stages.
Q7: Why is imprinting restricted to a brief time window after birth?
The critical period ensures animals imprint during a developmentally optimal window when they are most receptive to forming attachments. This timing allows rapid bonding with caregivers immediately after birth or hatching, which is crucial for survival. Once this window closes, the animal's imprinting preference becomes fixed and cannot be modified.
Explore Related Chapters



































