Gsd-skill-creator species-interaction-tracking
Following what organisms do — behavior, metamorphosis, host-plant relationships, social dynamics, and the long-form ethograms that reveal how species actually live. Covers the vocabulary of ethology, the structure of a life cycle, the classic categories of species interaction, the discipline of recording behavior without premature interpretation, and the gap between a single observation and a statistically useful record. Use when the task is to understand or record what a species does rather than what it is.
git clone https://github.com/Tibsfox/gsd-skill-creator
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/Tibsfox/gsd-skill-creator "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/examples/skills/nature-studies/species-interaction-tracking" ~/.claude/skills/tibsfox-gsd-skill-creator-species-interaction-tracking && rm -rf "$T"
examples/skills/nature-studies/species-interaction-tracking/SKILL.mdSpecies Interaction Tracking
Identification is the first step, not the last. Once an organism is named, there are a hundred more questions: what does it eat, who eats it, where does it nest, how does it defend territory, how does it find a mate, how does it raise its young, how does it survive winter, what hosts does it depend on. Species interaction tracking is the discipline of answering these questions through observation — recording what organisms actually do, in the wild, over enough time to see patterns emerge from individual events.
Agent affinity: goodall-nat (longitudinal ethology, primate and mammal behavior), merian (metamorphosis, host-plant relationships, insect life cycles)
Concept IDs: nature-animals-birds, nature-plants-fungi, nature-ecology-habitats
The Vocabulary of Ethology
Ethology is the scientific study of animal behavior in its natural context, founded by Niko Tinbergen, Konrad Lorenz, and Karl von Frisch. The field's vocabulary is the starting point for any serious behavioral observation.
Tinbergen's Four Questions
Niko Tinbergen proposed that any behavior can be examined from four complementary perspectives. A complete behavioral account answers all four.
| Question | What it asks | Example (robin catching a worm) |
|---|---|---|
| Causation | What triggers the behavior? | Visual or tactile cue of worm near surface |
| Development | How does it arise in the individual? | Juvenile robins learn the head-cock before striking |
| Function | What is it for? | Caloric intake, provisioning young |
| Evolution | How did it arise in the species? | Homologous foraging behaviors in other thrushes |
The four questions are not alternatives. They are parallel lenses on the same behavior, each yielding a different kind of answer.
Core Ethological Vocabulary
- Ethogram: a catalog of the behaviors of a species, compiled from extensive observation and used as the coding scheme for further study.
- Fixed action pattern: a stereotyped behavior sequence triggered by a specific stimulus and run to completion once started.
- Releaser: the stimulus that triggers a fixed action pattern (the red belly of a male stickleback, the gape of a chick to its parent).
- Displacement activity: a behavior that occurs out of context when an animal is in conflict between two motivations.
- Imprinting: rapid learning during a critical period, especially the parent-offspring bond in ground-nesting birds.
- Habituation: decreased response to a repeated stimulus.
- Conditioning: learned association between a stimulus and a response.
Life Cycles and Metamorphosis
Many organisms go through dramatically different life stages. Tracking behavior in such species requires treating each stage as effectively a different organism.
Insect Metamorphosis
Maria Sibylla Merian's 1705 Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium was the first systematic account of how insects actually develop — connecting caterpillar to butterfly, tadpole-like larva to beetle, and so on, through paired observation of each stage on its host plant. Before Merian, many Europeans believed caterpillars and butterflies were unrelated organisms.
| Metamorphosis type | Stages | Example groups |
|---|---|---|
| Holometabolous | Egg → larva → pupa → adult (complete metamorphosis) | Beetles, flies, wasps, butterflies, moths |
| Hemimetabolous | Egg → nymph (multiple instars) → adult (incomplete metamorphosis) | Grasshoppers, true bugs, dragonflies |
| Ametabolous | Egg → juvenile → adult (minimal change) | Silverfish, springtails |
For holometabolous species, the larva and the adult often eat completely different food, occupy different habitats, and face different predators. A complete behavioral picture requires tracking both stages across a full generation.
Host Plants and Obligate Associations
Many insects depend on specific host plants. Monarch butterflies require milkweed (Asclepias) for their larvae because the latex-sequestering defenses of monarchs depend on the alkaloids in milkweed. Many specialist bees depend on single plant families for pollen. Mycorrhizal fungi depend on specific tree partners.
Tracking host-plant relationships often yields the behavioral pattern. "Where does this butterfly lay eggs?" is usually answered by "on this specific plant, under this specific leaf condition, at this specific time of year."
Categories of Species Interaction
Every species interacts with others. The classical ecological categories:
| Interaction | Effect on species A | Effect on species B | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mutualism | + | + | Pollinator and flower |
| Commensalism | + | 0 | Bird nesting in a tree |
| Parasitism | + | − | Flea on a mammal |
| Predation | + | − | Hawk on a vole |
| Competition | − | − | Two birds contesting a nesting hole |
| Amensalism | 0 | − | Walnut tree releasing juglone, suppressing nearby plants |
| Neutralism | 0 | 0 | (Rare in practice; most sympatric species interact) |
Naming the interaction is the first step; following its dynamics over time is the full investigation. Many interactions shift between categories depending on conditions. A gut microbe may be commensal in one host and parasitic in another; a species pair may be competitive in one season and cooperative in another.
Longitudinal Observation
Behavior over seconds is not behavior. A single observation of a hawk capturing prey does not tell you how often it hunts, how often it succeeds, or what its actual prey base is. These questions require sustained observation over days, seasons, or years.
Jane Goodall at Gombe
Jane Goodall's 1960 arrival at Gombe Stream in Tanzania began what is now the longest continuous behavioral study in primatology. The core methodological innovations:
- Individual recognition. Every chimpanzee in the study population was named and tracked individually over its lifetime. This was controversial at the time — the established protocol was to number subjects to avoid anthropomorphism — but it enabled kinship, personality, and cross-generational analysis that numbered subjects could not support.
- Daily observation. Researchers spent every working day following the community, regardless of whether anything notable was happening.
- Patient presence. Goodall's early months produced almost no observations because the chimpanzees fled. She persisted until they habituated to her presence, at which point behavior that had never been seen before became routine.
- Honest reporting of surprise. Goodall's documentation of tool use, meat-eating, and infanticide in wild chimpanzees contradicted the prevailing view of chimpanzee behavior. She reported what she saw.
The Gombe study is the template for serious behavioral observation: individual recognition, sustained presence, honest reporting, and trust in what the subjects do over what the literature says they should do.
Sampling Methods
Formal ethology uses several sampling protocols. A naturalist should understand which applies to a given question.
- Ad libitum sampling: record whatever looks interesting. Useful for building an ethogram, unreliable for quantitative analysis.
- Focal animal sampling: pick one individual and record everything it does for a set period. The standard method for quantitative behavior.
- Scan sampling: at fixed intervals, record what every individual in a group is doing. Used for activity budgets of whole groups.
- Event sampling: record every occurrence of a specific behavior of interest, regardless of who does it. Used when the behavior is rare but critical.
Recording Behavior Without Premature Interpretation
The biggest pitfall in behavioral observation is recording interpretations instead of observations. "The crow was angry" is an interpretation; "the crow gave three harsh calls, raised its wing feathers, and lunged toward the Cooper's hawk" is an observation. The interpretation may be correct but it is not the record.
Discipline for Observational Records
- Describe what you see, not what it means. Meaning can be added later; description cannot be reconstructed.
- Use neutral verbs. "Approached" rather than "attacked." "Vocalized" rather than "protested." Switch to interpretive language only in an explicit "interpretation" section.
- Record time to the second when possible. Event duration is data.
- Separate observation from inference. A good field record has a "what I saw" column and a "what I think it means" column, kept distinct.
- Note what you missed. "Could not see the left wing of the nearer bird" is information.
Single Observation vs. Pattern
A single observation is an anecdote. A pattern is data. The gap between the two is the point where naturalism either becomes research or stays as personal learning. Both are valuable, but they should not be confused.
- An anecdote is useful for: building the ethogram, noticing that a behavior exists, raising a question for future observation.
- A pattern is required for: quantitative claims, statistical testing, publication, citizen-science contribution at research grade.
Upgrading an anecdote to a pattern requires deliberate follow-up: repeating the observation under varied conditions, varying observer, varying location, and counting frequencies. Most individual observers never close this gap, but the few who do contribute the bulk of the primary data in field ethology.
When to Use This Skill
- The user wants to interpret what an organism is doing.
- The user wants to set up a longitudinal observation of a species or habitat.
- The user wants to record behavior in a journal in a way that preserves its research value.
- The user wants to understand metamorphosis, host-plant relationships, or life cycles.
- The user wants to assess whether a pattern they have noticed is anecdotal or data-worthy.
When NOT to Use This Skill
- The user does not yet know what species the organism is (promote to
).field-identification - The user wants taxonomic detail (promote to
).taxonomic-classification - The user wants habitat or biogeographic context (promote to
).ecosystem-mapping - The user wants basic nature journaling structure rather than behavioral specifically (promote to
).nature-journaling
Decision Guidance
- Identify before interpreting. Behavior without a species ID cannot be cross-referenced to literature or ethograms.
- Describe before naming the meaning. Preserve the raw observation in a form that survives a later reinterpretation.
- Count before concluding. One observation is an anecdote; reliable claims need repetition.
- Respect the subject. Sustained observation changes the observer. Honest naturalism means acknowledging when behavior you thought was rare is actually common once you learn to see it.
Cross-References
- goodall-nat agent: Longitudinal ethology, primate and mammal behavior, individual recognition.
- merian agent: Metamorphosis, host-plant relationships, insect life cycles.
- audubon agent: Bird behavior during the observation itself.
- field-identification skill: Identifying the subject before behavior can be interpreted.
- nature-journaling skill: Recording the observation in a durable form.
References
- Tinbergen, N. (1963). "On aims and methods of ethology." Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie, 20, 410–433.
- Lorenz, K. (1965). Evolution and Modification of Behavior. University of Chicago Press.
- Altmann, J. (1974). "Observational study of behavior: sampling methods." Behaviour, 49(3-4), 227–267. (Defines the modern sampling protocols.)
- Goodall, J. (1986). The Chimpanzees of Gombe: Patterns of Behavior. Harvard University Press.
- Goodall, J. (1971). In the Shadow of Man. Houghton Mifflin.
- Merian, M. S. (1705). Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium. Amsterdam.
- Martin, P., & Bateson, P. (2007). Measuring Behaviour: An Introductory Guide, 3rd ed. Cambridge University Press.
- Ehrlich, P. R., Dobkin, D. S., & Wheye, D. (1988). The Birder's Handbook. Simon and Schuster.