Respuesta :
Answer:
False
Explanation:
The behavior is a complex process in living organisms. The behavior is 2 types - innate, and acquired behavior. The innate behavior is the inborn behavior and it is the species memory. Because innate behavior passes from one generation to next.
e.g. Waving of the net by spiders, birds are innate behavior, they do not learn it from any other species. While adaptive behavior is learned one, it acquires by experience. But many times 2 behavior mix with each other that, one can not distinguish the difference.
e.g. If someone pet a cat, keep it in an isolated place for a long time. The cat does not get the chance to hunt. When a mouse is kept before it, the cat does not react unless the mouse moves. When the mouse runs, it drags the attention of the cat, and the cat captures it. The cat after some trial hunts the rat.
Here hunting is the innate behavior of the cat, but this behavior comes out when it gets the chance.
Similarly, the development of pecking in the newly hatched chick is an example of both innate and adaptive behavior. Young chicks have an inborn tendency to peck objects. Initially, they peck indiscriminately, after many trials, and errors they peck right objects.
Learning behavior helps to modify the innate behavior, helps the organisms to cope well. These 2 behaviors are so intact with each other,
it is hard to differentiate the two behaviors.